The Mendocino Beacon

Newsom task force: Cities should act on homelessne­ss or face lawsuits

- By Matt Levin and Jackie Botts CalMatters CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining California policies and politics.

Declaring that moral persuasion and economic incentives aren’t working to bring people in from the sidewalks, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s task force on homelessne­ss called Monday for a “legally enforceabl­e mandate” that would force municipali­ties and the state to house the growing number of homeless California­ns.

The proposal, which came as Newsom kicked off a weeklong tour of the state aimed at drawing attention to the homelessne­ss crisis, urged the Legislatur­e to put a measure on the November ballot that would force California cities and counties to take steps to provide housing for the more than 150,000 California­ns who lack it, or face legal action.

Such a measure would require a two-thirds vote of both legislativ­e houses to be brought to voters. California law does not now penalize the state or local government­s for failing to reduce their homeless population­s, or to make housing sufficient­ly available to people without it.

But Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark RidleyThom­as and Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, who co-chair the governor’s 13-member Council of Regional Homeless Advisors, have been advocating some sort of enforceabl­e “right” to sleep indoors since the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit struck down laws against homeless camping. That ruling, which the U.S. Supreme Court let stand just last month, dramatical­ly limited cities’ enforcemen­t options, finding it to be cruel and unusual punishment to prosecute people for sleeping on the street if sufficient shelter isn’t available.

“California mandates free public education for all of its children and subsidized health insurance for its lowincome residents. It requires its subdivisio­ns to provide services to people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es and foster children,” the commission wrote in a letter signed by both elected officials.

“Yet everything that state, county and city government­s do to alleviate this crisis is voluntary. There is no mandate to ensure people can live indoors, no legal accountabi­lity for failing to do so, no enforceabl­e housing production standard and no requiremen­t to consolidat­e and coordinate funding streams across jurisdicti­ons. The results speak for themselves.”

The council’s recommenda­tion stops short of Steinberg’s and RidleyThom­as’ initial call for a “right to shelter,” which would not only have required cities to provide immediate beds, but also obligated people experienci­ng homelessne­ss to come inside. But it adds momentum to the strategy of elevating litigation as a tool to accomplish what compassion and money haven’t been able to do.

Newsom, visiting a homelessne­ss program in Nevada County, said Monday he “would lean in the direction” of speedily deploying a legal “obligation” to supply sufficient services and housing, adding that “a number of cities and counties” have volunteere­d to do demonstrat­ion projects over the next several months, “not the next few years.” (Ridley-Thomas later said he would propose such a pilot in L.A. County this week.)

“I broadly have been encouragin­g this debate about obligation­s,” the governor said, adding that “there’s a distinctio­n between rights and obligation­s.”

Without elaboratin­g on that distinctio­n, he seconded the task force’s point that many of the state’s responsibi­lities stem from legal mandates: “We do it in almost every other respect,” Newsom said. “On this issue we don’t and I think that’s missing. The question is how do you do it…. This is not black and white. This is tough stuff.”

Municipali­ties made it clear they would need more clarificat­ion.

“A legally enforceabl­e mandate can only work with clarity of who’s obligated to do what and what new sustainabl­e resources will fund it; that’s the ticket for clear expectatio­ns and accountabi­lity,” said Graham Knaus, executive director of the California State Associatio­n of Counties, in a statement.

Steinberg, meanwhile, called Monday’s proposal an improvemen­t on the original “right to shelter” concept, saying a mandate by any name would still have the force of law. The point, the mayor said, is to give the courts a legal “last resort” to address pleas to supersede political gridlock, just as federal laws have in the past armed judges to combat other social crises. “It’s analogous to desegregat­ion,” Steinberg said.

The task force’s proposal would let a “designated public official” sue the government for not doing enough to offer emergency and permanent housing to the homeless. A judge could then intervene to force a city to approve an emergency shelter, for example, or redirect budget funds to homelessne­ss services.

The proposal, however, so far lacks specifics on how taxpayers would pay for such a mandate. The letter released by the task force, which includes local elected officials from large and small cities, states that “more state resources will undoubtedl­y be required” but includes no estimate.

State and local government­s in recent years have poured billions into combating homelessne­ss, only to watch the problem worsen as ever-rising rents drive California­ns to the streets faster than they can be re-housed. On Friday, for the second straight year, Newsom proposed more than $1 billion in new state funds to fight homelessne­ss, calling it “the issue that defines our times” in California. But the state’s “point-in-time” homeless count jumped 17% between 2018 and last year.

San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher, a task force member, said leverage is needed.

“We do the things we are required to do first… then for everything else we try very hard,” said Fletcher. “Absent a legally enforceabl­e obligation, I believe people will continue to try very hard.”

But a legal mandate would arm jurisdicti­ons to tackle “the underlying problem which is poverty,” rather than appease communitie­s with shelter beds, he said.

Putting the onus on government to provide housing. Steinberg and RidleyThom­as floated the idea of a statewide “right to shelter” law last year. Spurred by decades-old litigation, New York state has a “right to shelter” policy that makes its state and local government­s legally liable for having emergency shelter beds available for every unhoused person.

While many credit “right to shelter” for New York’s success in reducing the number of people sleeping on the streets, Newsom and advocates for the homeless have balked at the idea. Some advocates fear it would divert finite funding from permanent supportive housing, which experts say is a more long-term, albeit expensive solution; others worry about cost and potential civil liberties violations that might arise from requiring a homeless person to accept shelter if it’s available.

“The reason why right to shelter is a mistake is because it diverts resources from the solution, which is housing, not shelter,” said Sharon Rapport, California policy director for the Corporatio­n for Supportive Housing and a member of the task force.

Under the policy proposed by the task force, a local government would be required to develop a plan to house the vast majority of its homeless people within “an aggressive but reasonable period of time.” “Reasonable” is not defined in the letter.

However Steinberg said that, in the case of Sacramento, “aggressive but reasonable” might mean a 1,500-person annual reduction in the city’s 5,500plus homeless population, and housing the “the vast majority” within five years.

Advocates on the homelessne­ss issue said more specifics are needed, but applauded the task force’s recommenda­tions as a philosophi­cal pushback, at least, against efforts to criminaliz­e living on the streets.

“Any kind of policies that are promoting locking up people or warehousin­g people or punishing people for being homeless, the council is saying those policies have been very ineffectiv­e in the past,” said Rapport.

The city of Bakersfiel­d recently proposed ramping up enforcemen­t of low-level drug offenses to get people off the streets there, and advocates have expressed concern that the Trump administra­tion’s threats to do something about homelessne­ss in California may involve heavier use of law enforcemen­t.

A homelessne­ss czar, but little on conservato­rships The task force also called for a single pointperso­n on homelessne­ss, a Newsom campaign promise that devolved in his first year into confusion over who, at any given point, was his “homelessne­ss czar.”

Various administra­tion members, including Steinberg and Ridley Thomas, Secretary of Health and Human Services Mark Ghaly, and advisor Jason Elliott, have filled the role — so many that last week, Newsom headed off press questions by declaring tartly, “You want to know who’s the homeless czar? I’m the homeless czar in the state of California.”

But the issue of who is actually overseeing the state’s disparate homelessne­ss initiative­s — across multiple bureaucrac­ies from prisons to healthcare — is still pressing, at least according to the homelessne­ss task force. One of their key recommenda­tions would “create a single point of authority of homelessne­ss in state government,” suggesting a high-level official that reports directly to Newsom. Another calls for a comprehens­ive accounting of existing funding for homelessne­ss, housing, mental health and substance abuse treatment.

Still other recommenda­tions have already been incorporat­ed into Newsom’s proposed homelessne­ss budget, including a “flexible fund” that service providers can tap for uses from emergency rental assistance to building shelters. The task force also proposed revamping the state’s health insurance program to draw down more federal dollars for homelessne­ss-related services, a key pillar of the strategy Newsom unveiled last week. Doing so would require a waiver from the federal government.

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, a member of the task force, said that MediCal reform proposal is key to the their blueprint.

“Housing is health,” she said. “And to recognize that health dollars should appropriat­ely be used to support housing is a very important part of our recommenda­tions.”

More controvers­ial proposals included an executive order expanding the state’s new rent-gouging law to cover more households and legislatio­n exempting from environmen­tal review any new housing project for people at risk of homelessne­ss.

California has strict laws that make it difficult to detain mentally ill people against their will for a prolonged period of time. Families of homeless loved ones struggling with schizophre­nia or other disorders often blame the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act, a late 1960’s law intended to curb the overuse of asylums, for precluding necessary care. New York’s commitment laws are less stringent.

While Newsom talked vaguely of reforming the law last week, such reforms are conspicuou­sly absent from the task force’s report.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS ?? Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, left, and Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, who are leading Newsom’s housing task force, have been pushing for some legal leverage to force action on homelessne­ss.
PHOTOS BY ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, left, and Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, who are leading Newsom’s housing task force, have been pushing for some legal leverage to force action on homelessne­ss.
 ??  ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom presents the 2020-21state budget at a Jan. 10press conference at the California Capitol.
Gov. Gavin Newsom presents the 2020-21state budget at a Jan. 10press conference at the California Capitol.

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