Marin Independent Journal

Shelter plan for winter in flux

Virus risk complicate­s services for homeless

- By Richard Halstead rhalstead@marinij.com

Marin County is on the brink of acquiring two commercial buildings to house the homeless, but its plan for winter sheltering remains a work in progress.

“We’re working right now on making a COVID-based plan to keep people safe during cold weather,” said Ashley Hart-McIntyre, the county’s homelessne­ss policy coordinato­r. “The looming winter is at the forefront of everyone’s mind.”

On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisor­s will consider issuing notices of intent to purchase the two buildings. The supervisor­s might consummate the purchases at their meeting on Nov. 10.

According to a county staff report, the Community Developmen­t Agency has negotiated to purchase the Americas Best Value Inn hotel at 1591 Casa Buena Drive in Corte Madera for $4.1 million and an office building at 3301 Kerner Blvd. in San Rafael for $7.2 million.

Leelee Thomas, a Marin County planning manager, said, “We’re fairly confident, but it’s not a done deal yet. We have some additional due diligence and requiremen­ts to meet for the state.”

The county has already been awarded $9.6 million through the state-funded Homekey program to help cover the costs. That includes a

$6.4 million allocation for the San Rafael building and $3.2 million for the Corte Madera hotel.

“It’s a really exciting opportunit­y that the state is investing this much money into housing for some of our most vulnerable folks,” Thomas said.

Thomas said the remaining $1.7 million would come from a variety of sources. She said San Rafael’s inclusiona­ry housing fund will supply the money to complete the purchase of the Kerner Boulevard building.

Developers sometimes pay into the fund to avoid San Rafael’s inclusiona­ry housing requiremen­t, which mandates that 20% of homes in large developmen­ts be sold or rented at below-market rates.

State money allocated to Marin through the “Whole

Person Care” pilot program and money from the county’s affordable housing trust fund will supply most of the additional $900,000 needed to complete the purchase of the Corte Madera hotel.

Har t- McIntyre said Homeward Bound of Marin, the nonprofit that

operates the county’s homeless shelters, plans to use the San Rafael building to temporaril­y house people displaced from its Mill Street shelter, which is being renovated.

She said that won’t be a problem, however, since Homekey projects may be used for interim housing as long as they eventually transition into permanent housing.

The state’s Homekey programis a spinoff of its Project Roomkey, which paid for counties to lease hotel rooms to temporaril­y shelter the homeless during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The county used three motels in Marin for this purpose. Now, as the program winds down, Homeward Bound of Marin is working with the county to find permanent housing for the people who were sheltered in the motels.

“Two of the three hotels still have residents,” HartMcInty­re said, “and we’re working on an offramp for all of those residents currently.”

Hart-McIntyre said 65 people are living in the two hotels that remain open. Prior to the pandemic, between October 2017 and February 2020, the county had placed about 200 people in permanent supportive housing through its “coordinate­d entry” program.

Under the program, clients grant permission for various agencies to share informatio­n about them to help find them housing.

Since the beginning of the pandemic in March, the county has placed an additional 91 people plus 12 families in permanent supportive housing.

Most of the housing was supplied through use of the federal government’s Section 811 housing vouchers. The Section 811 vouchers are similar to the more well-known Section 8 vouchers except they are limited to people under age 62who have disabiliti­es and are allocated on a competitiv­e basis.

Hart-McIntyre said that while availabili­ty of Section 8 vouchers has been limited, “we’ve been able to make that up with new allocation­s of Section 811 vouchers.”

Marin has already received 100 of the Section 811 vouchers and is applying for 75 more.

“We’ve received quite a number of them because we’re more successful in using them than many other communitie­s,” HartMcInty­re said, “largely because of the Housing Authority’s work with coordinate­d entry.”

Hart-McIntyre said no decision has been made yet about how the county will provide for emergency shelter for the homeless this winter if the weather turns especially cold or rainy.

“Our goal is to get people into permanent housing,” she said. “Too much focus on shelter can really impair our ability to do that, but we also need to make sure people are safe when it is cold and wet.”

“We are working really closely now with our public health officer on how we can best do that,” she said. “We’ve got it on warp-speed.”

 ?? SHERRY LAVARS — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL ?? Marin County officials have secured nearly $10million in state funding to buy 3301Kerner Blvd. in San Rafael, above, and the Americas Best Value Inn in Corte Madera for conversion to apartments for the homeless.
SHERRY LAVARS — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL Marin County officials have secured nearly $10million in state funding to buy 3301Kerner Blvd. in San Rafael, above, and the Americas Best Value Inn in Corte Madera for conversion to apartments for the homeless.

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