Lake County Record-Bee

As COVID hotels close, new homes open for more than 100 homeless Oaklanders

Newsom’s Project Homekey funded the sites

- By Marisa Kendall

More than 100 homeless Oaklanders will move from temporary COVID-19 hotels and into permanent housing this holiday season, Mayor Libby Schaaf said Wednesday, announcing the opening of the city’s latest state-funded homeless housing project.

Oakland, in partnershi­p with Bay Area Community Services, purchased 17 single-family homes that will provide long-term housing for people who are homeless and elderly or medically compromise­d and especially vulnerable to coronaviru­s. The project was funded by a $10 million Project Homekey grant Gov. Gavin Newsom awarded the city in September. People have started moving in, and the homes should be filled by the end of this year or early next year.

Schaaf called the project a “Christmas miracle.”

“This brings new meaning to the phrase home for the holidays,” she said. “Thanks to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Project Homekey, more than 100 formerly homeless vulnerable seniors and people struggling with other health issues are going to receive their forever homes.”

The funding is part of more than $800 million Newsom doled out through Project Homekey to help cities and counties buy hotels, apartments and other buildings and turn them into homeless housing. It comes as Project Roomkey hotels, which temporaril­y sheltered homeless people at greater risk of dying from COVID-19, are starting to close in Alameda County and throughout the state.

Each person moving into the new Oakland houses will have a private bedroom with a locking door, but will share the kitchen and other communal spaces with roommates. Residents, many of whom will be living on Social Security, will pay deeply reduced rents each month, and can continue living in the home as long as they wish. The city guarantees the properties’ rents will remain subsidized for 55 years.

Jamie Almanza, CEO of Bay Area Community Services, called the properties “permanent forever homes.”

Bay Area Community Ser vices has used this model as homeless housing for years, and prior to Homekey operated 13 single-family homes in Oakland, Hayward, Pleasanton, Livermore and Vallejo. The organizati­on hopes to purchase several more using $5 million the Crankstart Foundation contribute­d to the program.

Oakland — which has a population of more than 4,000 homeless residents — received about $38 million from the Homekey pot for four projects. One was the collection of single-family homes. Another was Clifton Hall — a 63-unit California College of the Arts dormitory in Rockridge, which the city bought and turned into housing. The top two floors are permanent housing for at least 42 seniors, the second floor is a 20-household family shelter, and the ground floor provides services and support for homeless families. The city planned to begin moving people in this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States