Oroville Mercury-Register

Newsom proposes $12B to house the homeless

- By Julie Watson and Janie Har

Proposal includes building an estimated 46,000 housing units, rental subsidies and programs’ expansion.

Buoyed by a large budget surplus and swimming in federal pandemic recovery money, California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday proposed $12 billion to get more people experienci­ng homelessne­ss off the streets and into homes of their own.

Newsom’s proposal includes $8.75 billion over two years to create an estimated 46,000 housing units, expanding on a program he launched last year to convert motels and other properties into housing. Nearly half the money would go toward housing in places where people with mental health and other behavioral issues can get services onsite.

Newsom also proposed spending $ 3.5 billion on rental subsidies, new housing and shelter with the aim of ending family homelessne­ss within five years. It would help families with minors avoid losing their homes in the first place or help them get sheltered without spending days, weeks or months on a waitlist.

“As governor I actually want to get something done. I don’t want to talk about this for a decade,” Newsom said in a news conference at a former San Diego Residence Inn that has been converted into housing for 177 previously homeless people.

“What’s happening on our streets and sidewalks is unacceptab­le,” he said.

The Democratic governor, who faces a recall election this year, seized on the twin issues of homelessne­ss and housing affordabil­ity early on in his first term

as governor. The nation’s most populous state has an estimated 161,000 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, more than any other state. Advocates say they can’t house people quickly enough with a shortage of units and high rents.

The largest concentrat­ion of homelessne­ss is in Los Angeles, where Mayor Eric Garcetti last month vowed to spend nearly $1 billion to move some of the 61,000 homeless people in Los Angeles County off the streets. Rows of tents, cardboard shelters, battered RVs and makeshift plywood structures have now expanded beyond the notorious Skid Row throughout the nation’s second-most populous city.

During the pandemic, Newsom launched projects “Roomkey” and “Homekey” using federal money to house homeless residents

in hotels and helping cities, counties and other local entities buy and convert motels and other buildings into housing. Newsom officials said $800 million spent on the Homekey program created 6,000 more housing units, providing shelter for 8,200 people.

One of them is Lindsey Prescott, who made an unplanned appearance at Newsom’s news conference after her 18-month-old daughter Mia waved at the governor when he arrived at a converted Residence Inn operated by Father Joe’s Villages.

Prescott said she was homeless for five years, struggling with addiction after her mother died, and lost her daughter to foster care. She said she got Mia back in May after she stopped using drugs and was selected to move into the former hotel.

“I feel normal,” said Prescott, as Mia darted around an interior patio next to a tennis court. “I’m a mom. I have my daughter. She has her crib next to my bed. I go to the grocery store. I cook.”

Prescott expects to stay at the converted hotel for two years, then move to an apartment or house. There is no limit to how long people can stay at Father Joe’s, and some may choose to live permanentl­y.

Nan Roman, president and CEO of the National Alliance to End Homelessne­ss, called Newsom’s hotel and motel programs gamechange­rs that took advantage of the pandemic to make real changes. A topsy-turvy real estate market and the federal government throwing money at local government­s makes it an ideal time to expand housing, she said.

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 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A woman eats at her tent at the Echo Park homeless encampment at Echo Park Lake in Los Angeles.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A woman eats at her tent at the Echo Park homeless encampment at Echo Park Lake in Los Angeles.

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