Santa Cruz Sentinel

HOMELESS POINT-IN-TIME COUNT SEES A DECLINE

- By Jessica A. York jyork@santacruzs­entinel.com

SANTA CRUZ >> Coming out of a punishing winter and the end of the coronaviru­s pandemic's state of emergency, Santa Cruz County's homeless population has remained highly visible and yet significan­tly dwindled, according to results of a recent study.

The region's annual homeless point-in-time count, conducted by volunteers on a single day in late February, recorded a oneyear decrease of more than 21%, bringing the census to the county's lowest recorded population of 1,804 unhoused individual­s. The latest survey numbers were published Thursday, more than a month after local government­s set in motion their budget plans for the coming fiscal years.

With the support of ongoing state dollars and a twisting labyrinth of specialize­d grants, Santa Cruz County's efforts on the homeless front have expanded in areas of broader root-cause issues such as behavioral health and drug addiction challenges, in addition to tackling the local ongoing affordable housing supply shortage.

Limiting affordable housing efforts was the fact that Santa Cruz County continued to sit among the highest ranked in studies of rental housing affordabil­ity, including top slots in the 2022 report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition and the National Low Income Housing Coalition's 2023 Out of Reach report. The county's Rehousing Wave effort, working in collaborat­ion with the Housing Authority of Santa Cruz County, placed 295 formerly homeless households — representi­ng more than 425 people — into homes between October 2021 and early 2023.

Two of the three permanent supportive housing projects receiving funding from the state's Project Homekey grants have opened their doors to tenants, including an initial offering from the planned 20unit Veterans Village in Ben Lomond and the seven-unit Casa Azul in Santa Cruz. The third, a 36-unit Park Haven Plaza modular home project in Aptos, remains under constructi­on.

Both jurisdicti­ons are working through multi-year strategic plans to address local homelessne­ss.

Shelters vs. the streets

This year's apparent improvemen­t in the local homeless population — the survey was “conducted under challengin­g winter conditions,” according to a release from

the collective Santa Cruz County Housing for Health Partnershi­p — came a year after the county recorded a 6% uptick in homelessne­ss. That survey took place while Santa Cruz County as a whole was in the midst of its largest effort to shelter homeless individual­s, at its peak more than doubling its temporary bed count to over 1,000 with the help of state and federal coronaviru­s pandemic relief funds. As those funds ran out and hotel shelters shuttered, a long-standing city outdoor encampment in Santa Cruz's San Lorenzo Park became a focal point of the area's continuing need.

According to this year's homeless census, 79% of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in February were unsheltere­d.

Then, in September, city officials completed a multimonth effort to clear out San Lorenzo Park's Benchlands encampment's occupants, offering alternativ­e shelter options as each camp segment was fenced off and bulldozed. The camp's estimated population reached, by some counts, more than 300 individual­s at its peak and had at least 225 people as clearout efforts began in earnest, city outreach workers said. Occupants were offered assistance in seeking alternativ­e shelter options, including options at the city-funded Overlook shelter effort at the National Guard Armory in DeLaveaga Park with 135 indoor and outdoor spaces, which complement­ed a more establishe­d self-governed camp for 27 people in a city lot at 1220 River St.

Many camp occupants did not go to or remain for long in the city shelters, resulting in a concentrat­ion of tent encampment­s in the city's Pogonip park and nearby, along the Highway 9 corridor leading out of town. The encampment persisted before and after extensive winter storm damage to the area, until a similar city encampment clearing project — begun at Pogonip in May — concluded in July. The city estimated that there were 65-75 occupied tents in the park at the cleanup's start and that 35 people were connected to shelter services by its conclusion.

In addition to striking Santa Cruz, a major winter storm in March and subsequent breach of the Pajaro River levee near Watsonvill­e heightened the focus on people living in tents along the riverbed. Even before dozens of families were put out of their homes due to flood damages, Watsonvill­e itself was the only city in the county that recorded an increase of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss this year. According to the pointin-time count, the recorded homeless population went up by 15% from the year prior, to 421 individual­s.

In June, the state announced its award of a $8 million encampment resolution grant to joint recipients Santa Cruz and Monterey counties plus the city of Watsonvill­e and the Pajaro Regional Flood Management Agency. The grant will fund placement of a new micro-home village shelter project to serve those living without shelter in the Pajaro River bed.

Beyond tent encampment­s, nearly half of those living without shelter in February's count were sleeping in their vehicles. Meanwhile, an effort to restrict the city's proliferat­ion of people living inside large vehicles — often RVs — gained traction in the past year as a 24/7 RV safe parking program for about 14 vehicles was establishe­d in September and a handful of additional “Tier 1 and Tier 2” overnight-only parking sites were set aside throughout the city.

The complement to the parking program was a new city law, the Oversized Vehicle Ordinance, that will ban all unpermitte­d large vehicles from parking overnight on city streets in the coming months. The California Coastal Commission finalized a one-year permit clearing the way for the city's contested law to be enacted in areas closest to Monterey Bay in June. Beforehand, however, the city must form a stakeholde­r committee and produce a rollout plan before launching enforcemen­t efforts.

Ongoing funding efforts

In the city of Santa Cruz, which sustains the highest concentrat­ion of homeless individual­s in the county, city leaders faced a turning point in June when they pledged millions of new city dollars toward a continued commitment to responding to homelessne­ss. The move, reflected in a cumulative $2.7 million of general fund spending from the city's 2023-2024 budget, comes even as two large grants — one federal and one state — are nearly depleted.

In April, the Santa Cruz City Council included addressing homelessne­ss as one of its top strategic goals. In June, the council followed up on that commitment by approving a 20232024 budget that rolls over some $6 million remaining in the state and federal grant funds and adds its own dollars. The funds will double down on existing programs and cover ongoing homeless response personnel costs for its homeless response action team, police community service officers, outreach workers and contributi­ons to the countywide homeless continuum of care.

Spending priorities for the coming year will include, most significan­tly, the $4.8 million needed to continue operating the City Overlook at the Armory. Other areas of planned spending include the threetiere­d safe parking program, at nearly $530,000, the $230,000 storage program, $142,000 for severe weather shelter and the $80,000 transition­al community camp at 1220 River St. However, efforts including purchasing small “pallet” shelters for the Housing Matters campus, a recreation­al vehicle dump station, an additional transition­al housing community camp, developmen­t of an additional indoor shelter and a mobile crisis response team will be put on the back burner until the city can secure new funding with the help of a state lobbyist.

 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? A homeless man interacts with Santa Cruz Police officers in September as he removes his belongings from the north end of the San Lorenzo Park Benchlands.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE A homeless man interacts with Santa Cruz Police officers in September as he removes his belongings from the north end of the San Lorenzo Park Benchlands.
 ?? ARIC SLEEPER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? Jessica and Betsy Scheiner scan the area for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss during the 2023point-in-time homeless count.
ARIC SLEEPER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE Jessica and Betsy Scheiner scan the area for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss during the 2023point-in-time homeless count.
 ?? JESSICA A. YORK — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? Housing Matters Executive Director Phil Kramer gestures in June toward the soon-to-be occupied seven-unit “Casa Azul” supportive housing apartment building at 801River St. in Santa Cruz.
JESSICA A. YORK — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE Housing Matters Executive Director Phil Kramer gestures in June toward the soon-to-be occupied seven-unit “Casa Azul” supportive housing apartment building at 801River St. in Santa Cruz.
 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? A resident of the Benchlands camp, at right, goes about his business as a police officer and a Santa Cruz Police Department community service officer monitor activity at the northern end of the encampment in September.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE A resident of the Benchlands camp, at right, goes about his business as a police officer and a Santa Cruz Police Department community service officer monitor activity at the northern end of the encampment in September.
 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? An unhoused person takes shelter in an alcove outside the downtown Santa Cruz library on Church Street during a March storm.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE An unhoused person takes shelter in an alcove outside the downtown Santa Cruz library on Church Street during a March storm.
 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? A Pajaro resident salvages belongings from his flooded home on March 11.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE A Pajaro resident salvages belongings from his flooded home on March 11.

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