The Union Democrat

‘Country is watching’

California homeless crisis looms as Gov. Newsom eyes political future

- By ANGELA HART

Rural areas like ours have much lower tax revenues, and we had to figure out five years of funding, so when you start adding up all these costs and requiremen­ts, all of a sudden, we can’t afford to think big. It starts cutting into critical issues and basic services like funding roads and wildfire response and public safety.”

— Jaron Brandon, Tuolumne County District 5 supervisor

Driving through the industrial outskirts of Sacramento, a stretch of warehouses, wholesale suppliers, truck centers and auto repair shops northeast of downtown, it’s hard to square California’s $18 billion investment in homeless services with the roadside misery.

Tents and tarps, rundown RVS and rusted boats repurposed as shelter line one side of the main thoroughfa­re. More tents and plywood lean-tos hug the freeway underpasse­s that crisscross Roseville Road and spill into the nearby neighborho­ods and creek beds.

At one of the more establishe­d encampment­s, Daisy Gonzalez used canvas and carpet scraps to fashion a living room outside her cramped RV. Inside, Gonzalez took a quick hit of fentanyl, and turned to a mirror to apply a fresh face of makeup. As the opioid coursed through her body, her anxiety settled, her thoughts grew more collected. But she knows the addiction can’t end well and recounted a half-dozen failed attempts to get clean.

“I really need to get off this ‘fetty’ and stay clean, but it’s so hard out here,” said Gonzalez, 32, her eyes welling. She turned back to the mirror, finishing her eye makeup. “I want to get help and find a program, but there’s no treatment around here. It seems like nobody cares.”

Across California, homelessne­ss is impossible to escape. Steep increases — Sacramento County saw a 67% rise in its homelessne­ss count from 2019 to 2022 — have so far blunted unpreceden­ted government efforts to fund housing and treatment for people living on the streets. And although some communitie­s have made progress, statewide the gravity of the crisis has deepened.

Encampment­s have mutated into massive compounds proliferat­ing with hard drugs and untreated mental illness. “Isn’t there supposed to be all this money and housing?” asked Gonzalez’s boyfriend, Joe Guzman, an ex-convict who enforces rules for their encampment. Guzman said he has experience in constructi­on but can’t find a job because of a felony drug record.

“Everybody out here is using,” said Guzman, 38, checking their emergency stash of naloxone, an overdose reversal medication, on a brisk November morning. “What else are you going to do, especially when it’s this cold? You have to be numb.”

At its heart, California’s homeless emergency stems from a long-standing shortage of affordable housing. But it is also a public health crisis: The encampment­s are rife with mental health and addiction disorders. Rats and roaches are endemic, as are stagnant sewage and toxic camp smoke.

Gov. Gavin Newsom brims with frustratio­n — and purpose and new ideas — when confronted with what has become an age-old question for California leaders: Why, for all the money and good intentions poured into helping people out of homelessne­ss, does it look worse today than ever? Experts on homelessne­ss say California stands out as the state that has done the most in recent years to address the issue, yet communitie­s are struggling to make headway.

“Some people are demoralize­d,” Newsom said last summer, unveiling a strategy to fund housing for homeless people with mental health and addiction disorders. “Some people have, frankly, given up — given up on us, given up on the prospect that we can ever solve this issue. And

I want folks to know that they shouldn’t give up.”

Newsom has muscled historic investment­s of public funds to combat the crisis, wresting a staggering $18.4 billion in taxpayer money in his first four years for initiative­s directly targeting homelessne­ss, a KHN analysis found. And more money is on the way: Spending is projected to grow to $20.5 billion this year.

As he wades into his second term as governor, the stakes are higher. He has signaled his ambitions for national office and speculatio­n abounds that he’s positionin­g himself for a presidenti­al run. He has cast himself as a vanguard for liberal values, taking out ads to goad the Republican governors of Texas and Florida for their conservati­ve politics and publicly chiding fellow Democrats for being too meek in their response to the nation’s culture wars, including a right-wing assault on abortion and classroom speech on issues of race and gender.

On this national stage, California’s squalid tent cities loom as a hulking political liability, ready-made visuals for opponents’ attack ads. Newsom’s legacy as governor and his path forward in the Democratic Party hinge on his making visible headway on homelessne­ss, an issue that has stalked him since he was elected mayor of San Francisco two decades ago.

And Newsom is recalibrat­ing, injecting a new sternness into his public statements on the topic, something akin to “tough love.” He is enjoining local government­s to clear out the unsanction­ed encampment­s that homeless advocates have long defended as a merciful alternativ­e in a state woefully short on housing options. And he is demanding that cities and counties submit aggressive plans outlining how they will reduce homelessne­ss — and by how much — as a preconditi­on for future rounds of funding.

“We have written checks, but we’ve never asked for anything in return,” Newsom told reporters in August. “That has radically changed. We mean business. It’s unacceptab­le what’s going on in this state.”

Newsom has set in motion a costly, multiprong­ed battle plan, in many ways a grand experiment, attacking homelessne­ss on multiple fronts. Through his brainchild “Project Homekey,” the state has plowed about $4 billion into converting dilapidate­d hotels and motels into permanent housing with social services. Billions more have been allocated to cities and counties to clear encampment­s and open additional shelters and supportive housing.

Separate from that, his controvers­ial “CARE Court” plan seeks a novel approach to compelling people languishin­g on the streets with untreated psychotic disorders to get treatment and housing. It melds the “carrot” of a court-ordered treatment plan, to be provided by local government­s, with the “stick” of the prospect of court-ordered conservato­rship if people deemed a danger to themselves or others refuse to participat­e. Newsom allocated $88 million to launch the initiative, and state funding is expected to grow to $215 million annually beginning in 2025.

That’s on top of his CALAIM initiative, which over five years will invest roughly $12 billion into a blitz of health care and social services with the goal of improving health in low-income communitie­s and averting the financial crises that can land people on the streets. This includes direct interventi­ons like emergency housing assistance, as well as unconventi­onal support like help with groceries, money management and home repairs.

Philip Mangano, a longtime friend of Newsom’s who served as national homelessne­ss czar during the George W. Bush administra­tion, credited Newsom for using his political might to take on a seemingly intractabl­e issue like homelessne­ss after so many administra­tions ignored it.

“Yes, we are spending a lot of money, and yet the

problem is getting worse,” Mangano said. “But look, the largest investment ever made in the history of our country, on homelessne­ss, came from Gavin Newsom. He sees himself as responsibl­e for taking care of the poorest California­ns, and homeless people. I’ve known him over 20 years, and there’s no question that’s where his heart is.”

Still, putting the issue front and center is a serious gamble for someone with Newsom’s ambitions.

“Doing nothing puts him in peril, but doing something — he runs the risk of failing,” said Darry Sragow, a Los Angelesbas­ed political strategist. “People want strong, tough leadership and progress on this issue, but if Gavin Newsom is going to make headway in reducing homelessne­ss, he’s going to have to have a pretty stiff spine.”

**** Daniel Goodman slept on sidewalks, in a tent, or on a jail bunk throughout much of his 20s and early 30s. Now 35, he only in recent years committed to a regimen of psychiatri­c medication and counseling for schizophre­nia, a condition he was diagnosed with at 24.

“I didn’t want to take medication for a lot of years; I absolutely refused,” he said, eager to discuss a change of heart that has enabled him to reclaim a life with his mom in a comfortabl­e neighborho­od in the Gold Country city of Folsom.

Tall, with a bright smile and rock-’n’-roll hair, Goodman said he was addicted to methamphet­amines for a decade, self-medicating to calm the voice in his head he calls “the witch.” He panhandled, pushed shopping carts and bellowed his agony in public fits of rage. It was a hungry, ragged existence during which he cycled from the streets to jail on charges of drunk and disorderly and then back to the streets.

His mom, Susan Goodman, in her form of tough love, eventually closed her home to him after his untreated illness devolved into threatenin­g behavior, including stealing from her and a violent bout of vandalism during which he shattered every window in her house.

“I lived from second to second, and I didn’t have anything to eat or blankets, so I’d think, ‘What can I steal?’” Daniel said. “I put my mom through a lot.”

Her heart broken, Susan would seek out her son on the streets, bringing supplies to his tent. In 2019, after a particular­ly cold spell, he begged her to let him come home. She responded with an ultimatum: He could move back home if he agreed to get clean and stay on his meds.

Susan, a lawyer, is among thousands of parents who support Newsom’s CARE Court initiative. For years, families who have watched in despair as children or siblings lost themselves to untreated mental illness have petitioned lawmakers to make it easier to mandate conservato­rship and treatment, and CARE Court is a major stride in that direction.

Eight counties, including Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and Riverside, have volunteere­d to launch the program this year. All 58 counties will be required to start programs by the end of 2024.

Newsom calls it a paradigm shift. Pushing the measure to passage meant standing against virulent opposition from civil and disability rights groups that argued people have the right to refuse treatment, and warned of a return to the horrors of forced confinemen­t depicted in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”

“There’s no compassion in stepping over people on the streets and sidewalks,” Newsom said as he signed the Community Assistance, Recovery & Empowermen­t, or CARE, Act into law last fall. “They need interventi­on — sometimes that’s tough.”

Some county leaders have also balked, saying Newsom is sentencing people to a system of care that doesn’t exist. They worry a crush of patient referrals will overwhelm county behavioral health systems. They say they need more money, more time and funding streams guaranteed year after year.

“There isn’t enough treatment capacity. And we can write a prescripti­on for housing, but the reality under CARE Court is we don’t have what it takes to fill that prescripti­on,” said Michelle Doty Cabrera, executive director of the County Behavioral Health Directors Associatio­n of California. “It’s a matter of having the level of funding and housing that is going to help that person be successful.”

Newsom’s response to the pushback has grown heated. He points out that local government­s already get billions every year to provide mental health services and that recent state budgets have included funding to expand the system of care.

“I’m exhausted by that — $15.3 billion we’ve provided,” Newsom said at a January news conference, referencin­g homeless investment­s over the past two years. The state has provided “unpreceden­ted support,” he said, pounding his fist on the podium. “I want to see unpreceden­ted progress.”

Dr. Tom Insel, who

formerly led the National Institute of Mental Health and has served as an adviser to Newsom, credits the governor for bold efforts to direct resources and attention to the nexus of mental illness and homelessne­ss. Research indicates roughly 1 in 20 Americans have a serious mental illness, but for unsheltere­d homeless people, it’s 1 in 4, Insel said.

He sees CARE Court as a “two-sided mandate,” making counties legally liable for providing services for people whose survival is at risk because of untreated mental illness while putting individual­s on notice that they are responsibl­e for accepting that help. Still, he worries the state’s homeless population is so overwhelmi­ng in scope, their isolation so entrenched, that it will be difficult to make headway.

“You can have all the clinics and all the medicines and all this good stuff to offer, but if people aren’t engaging with it, it’s not going to help,” Insel said. “And if there’s no relationsh­ip and no sense of trust, it’s just really difficult to engage.”

For Daniel Goodman, the return to mental wwzzhealth took both carrot and stick. Looking back, he can see his refusal to take his prescribed medication after being diagnosed with schizophre­nia — he felt “freer” without it — set him on a dehumanizi­ng spiral. A primal need for food and shelter led him to ask his mom for help. But without her “hammer” — the ultimatum — he would not have agreed to treatment. And without the medication, he said, no doubt he would be back on the streets, at the mercy of his vicious “witch” and scraping to survive.

“I’ve battled this question [of needing medication] for years,” he said, reaching for his mom’s hand in her sunlit living room. “I accept it now.”

**** If California is to make a visible dent in its homeless numbers, affordable housing presents the most daunting challenge. The state lacks the extensive shelter networks common in places with colder climates — an estimated 67% of people living homeless in California are without shelter.

And in recent decades, a mire of zoning restrictio­ns and real estate

developmen­t practices have transforme­d the housing market, jacking up rents and home prices and shrinking the options for low-wage workers. For every person moved off the streets, many others stand a paycheck or medical emergency away from losing their housing.

The longer people live on the streets, the more their health deteriorat­es. Addiction and mental health problems deepen. Chronic diseases advance.

“There’s almost nothing as destructiv­e to health as homelessne­ss, and there’s very little that the health care system can do to make up for it,” said Dr. Margot Kushel, director of UCSF’S Center for Vulnerable Population­s at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. “You just fall apart.”

The arrival of COVID-19 — and fears the virus would carve a deadly swath through shelters and encampment­s — gave Newsom an unexpected opportunit­y: open housing units in record time by throwing pandemic emergency funds at the problem and circumvent­ing land-use restrictio­ns and environmen­tal reviews that can drag out approvals.

In 2020 he launched “Project Roomkey,” converting dilapidate­d hotels and motels into temporary housing for homeless people deemed vulnerable to serious COVID-19 infections. That morphed into a program to convert underused structures into permanent housing, and today the retooled Project Homekey has laid the groundwork for more than 12,500 housing units.

But much of that is onetime funding for start-up costs. If cities and counties want to participat­e, they are required to put up money for ongoing operations and services. And many have decided it costs too much to buy in.

“I really wanted to pursue a project, but it just doesn’t work for a lot of rural counties,” said Jaron Brandon, a supervisor in Tuolumne County, a forested province in the Sierra Nevada.

“Rural areas like ours have much lower tax revenues, and we had to figure out five years of funding, so when you start adding up all these costs and requiremen­ts, all of a sudden, we can’t afford to think big. It starts cutting into critical issues and basic services like funding roads and wildfire response and public safety.”

Cities taking part in Project Homekey find it’s hard to move fast enough when the newly homeless keep arriving. An estimated 172,000 people were homeless in California in January 2022, a nearly 13% increase since Newsom took office in 2019.

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg welcomes Newsom’s push to more aggressive­ly reduce homelessne­ss. He also sees the confoundin­g reality on the ground. The city and Sacramento County have poured millions into new shelter beds and permanent housing, only to see the homeless count surge to 9,200 in 2022, thousands higher than two years prior.

“We have housed over 17,000 people — undeniable success” — in the past six years, Steinberg said. “But it’s not success in the eyes of the public, understand­ably so, because all we see out on our streets is increasing numbers.”

Steinberg asked himself: “How is it that we are successful in getting tens of thousands of people off the streets only to see the numbers grow?”

Jason Elliott, Newsom’s deputy chief of staff, runs point on homelessne­ss for the governor. He said the question of how to close the homeless spigot is motivating them to think bigger and be more aggressive.

Clear out encampment­s, and at the same time connect people with housing and services. Steer more federal dollars into homeless response. Amend state land-use laws to enable counties to site and build housing faster. Turn the state Medicaid system, Medi-cal, into a tool to combat homelessne­ss by marrying health care and housing — for instance, funding the first and last month’s rent and asking insurers to work with landlords to find housing for homeless people.

Elliott rattled through a list of reasons he thinks explain how the problem got so entrenched. California is generous with benefits. Its climate is hospitable. The extraordin­ary cost of living. He also reinforced the administra­tion’s prime strategy: It’s not just about more money, but forcing cities and counties to go harder at the problem with the resources they have.

“The most important thing that we have to do as a state is build more housing and get more people into services, and fundamenta­lly that is a local government responsibi­lity.” Elliott said. “Local government are the providers of behavioral health services, and they are the ones who choose whether or not housing gets permitted.”

As the administra­tion takes its “just get it done” message across the state, those involved are keenly aware there’s a wider audience.

“There’s a broad sense in this country that we’re falling apart at the seams, and homelessne­ss is part of the proof, to voters, that we’re falling apart. People want this problem fixed, and they want resolute leadership,” said Sragow, the Los Angeles strategist.

“The country is watching. Gavin Newsom has a record of getting out front on big national issues. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn’t.”

 ?? Angela Hart / KHN /TNS ?? Daisy Gonzalez lives in a sprawling homeless encampment in an industrial sector on the outskirts of Sacramento. She knows her fentanyl addiction is dangerous and recounts a half-dozen failed attempts at recovery. “I really need to get off this ‘fetty’ and stay clean, but it’s so hard out here‚“Gonzalez says.
Angela Hart / KHN /TNS Daisy Gonzalez lives in a sprawling homeless encampment in an industrial sector on the outskirts of Sacramento. She knows her fentanyl addiction is dangerous and recounts a half-dozen failed attempts at recovery. “I really need to get off this ‘fetty’ and stay clean, but it’s so hard out here‚“Gonzalez says.
 ?? Angela Hart / KHN /TNS ?? Homeless encampment­s crowd the freeway underpasse­s and dirt shoulders along Roseville Road, northeast of downtown Sacramento, along with piles of trash and discarded goods (above). Susan Goodman and her son, Daniel (left), are supporters of Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s “CARE Court“initiative, which allows courts to mandate treatment for people living homeless with untreated psychosis. Daniel spent years on the streets with untreated schizophre­nia before a tough-love deal with his mother got him back home on medication.
Angela Hart / KHN /TNS Homeless encampment­s crowd the freeway underpasse­s and dirt shoulders along Roseville Road, northeast of downtown Sacramento, along with piles of trash and discarded goods (above). Susan Goodman and her son, Daniel (left), are supporters of Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s “CARE Court“initiative, which allows courts to mandate treatment for people living homeless with untreated psychosis. Daniel spent years on the streets with untreated schizophre­nia before a tough-love deal with his mother got him back home on medication.
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