Los Angeles Times

$4.8 billion to homeless housing, local services

State budget earmarks record amount of spending for two years

- By Ari Plachta

California will spend a record $4.8 billion over two years to alleviate homelessne­ss after legislator­s Thursday unanimousl­y passed key details of a new state budget. The package, once signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom, will mark the state’s largest financial commitment to date in assisting people without adequate and safe housing.

In a deal reached last month, Newsom and lawmakers agreed to expand last year’s program to convert former hotels into permanent housing with federal coronaviru­s relief dollars and provide an additional $2 billion over two years to local government­s.

Appropriat­ion and oversight details were released last week as part of a lengthy process to divvy up a $262.6billion state budget boosted by a record cash surplus and federal pandemic relief.

“Big-city mayors have been longing for a day like this,” said Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, who has served as an advisor to Newsom on homelessne­ss issues. “We are enormously grateful to the governor and to the Legislatur­e for making homelessne­ss a priority

by consistent­ly providing direct allocation to cities and counties.”

Beyond helping those who are homeless, the new state budget includes $10 billion in spending on housing, including $1.75 billion for affordable housing constructi­on and millions in rental assistance, foreclosur­e prevention, mortgage assistance and first-time homeowner help.

An estimated 160,000 California­ns are homeless, according to official but inexact counts, a population that has grown by more than 39% over the last five years and disproport­ionately includes low-income Black and Latino people.

As the number of individual­s without housing and living in deep poverty has risen in recent years — not just in California’s urban centers but also in small and rural communitie­s — state assistance steadily increased and amounted to $1.5 billion total over the last three years.

Here’s how the new money will be spent.

$2 billion to local government­s

Also known as the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention program, cities, counties and local public-private homeless services groups will receive $1 billion over the next 12 months and another $1 billion in the fiscal year that begins the following July.

The money can be used for any combinatio­n of homeless programs, such as rental subsidies, permanent housing and shelters.

Cities with at least 300,000 residents will receive a total of $336 million in each of the two years; public-private efforts, known as “continuums of care,” will get $240 million; and California counties will get $224 million of the total funding. For the first time, Native American tribes can also receive up to $20 million.

Most allocation­s will be based on the size of a community’s homeless population, calculated during 2019 point-in-time counts — a survey sometimes criticized for being inexact but the last one taken before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

No city can receive more than 45% of the money, a cap that will reduce Los Angeles’ share by $13 million but meant to preserve money for smaller cities with less establishe­d infrastruc­ture to serve homeless people. Of the state’s 13 largest cities, the largest allocation­s will go to Los Angeles ($143.6 million), San Jose ($29.2 million) and San Diego ($27.3 million).

New oversight measures will come with the money.

Agencies must apply by

Sept. 15 to receive a 20% allocation of the funds. But to collect the rest, cities and counties must submit action plans to the state Homeless Coordinati­ng and Financing Council by June 30, 2022. That plan should detail the size and scale of a community’s homeless population, demographi­c data about who is being served and expected outcomes over a three-year period.

Local officials will be required to demonstrat­e

whether they have met their outcome goals by June 2025. Those communitie­s that do will be eligible for a share of $100 million in bonus funds.

$2.75 billion to Project Homekey

The budget authorizes $1.45 billion in the current fiscal year and $1.3 billion in 2022-23 in federal American Rescue Plan dollars to the second phase of Project Homekey, a program

launched by Newsom amid the pandemic that offered cities and counties $750 million in federal coronaviru­s relief funds to purchase hotels, motels and other vacant buildings and to convert them into interim and permanent housing.

The new money will be used for the acquisitio­n of single-family homes, residentia­l care facilities or manufactur­ed housing, as well as the leasing of properties and the conversion of

units to residentia­l space. To date, the program has created nearly 6,000 new units at 120 sites across California, and state officials say the costs have been roughly half the per-unit developmen­t cost of new constructi­on.

Tim Lawless, a branch chief at the state Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t, said costs per unit will probably rise due to increased expenses for labor, lumber and land.

“We’re finalizing the target number, which of course will be quite a bit higher than [the first year] given we’re talking about three times the funding,” he said.

The spending plan includes $150 million this year for Project Roomkey, the program launched in March 2020 to temporaril­y shield homeless people from COVID-19 by moving them into vacant hotel rooms. The program was largely phased out after it fell short of ambitious goals.

The budget also establishe­s a program to provide $40 million in one-time grants to address family homelessne­ss, prioritizi­ng jurisdicti­ons that demonstrat­e collaborat­ion across funding streams. And it will provide $50 million for locals to address concerns over homeless encampment­s, with extra help to transition individual­s into housing.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A HOMELESS camp encroaches on the sidewalk at Wilshire Boulevard and Alvarado Street in L.A.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A HOMELESS camp encroaches on the sidewalk at Wilshire Boulevard and Alvarado Street in L.A.
 ?? AN ESTIMATED Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? 160,000 California­ns are homeless, according to official but inexact counts. Above, a homeless man sleeps on the sand as homeless artist Reed Segovia sets up his stand on the Venice boardwalk in 2017.
AN ESTIMATED Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times 160,000 California­ns are homeless, according to official but inexact counts. Above, a homeless man sleeps on the sand as homeless artist Reed Segovia sets up his stand on the Venice boardwalk in 2017.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA will spend a record $4.8 billion over two years to alleviate homelessne­ss as part of the new state budget. Above, Braulio Baorales sits in front of his makeshift home beside the 10 Freeway in Los Angeles.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA will spend a record $4.8 billion over two years to alleviate homelessne­ss as part of the new state budget. Above, Braulio Baorales sits in front of his makeshift home beside the 10 Freeway in Los Angeles.

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