The Mercury News

Gov. Newsom unveils new housing funding.

Gov. Newsom plans to allocate an additional $500 million for crisis

- By Marisa Kendall mkendall@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Reiteratin­g that housing affordabil­ity remains one of his top priorities in the new year, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday unveiled a budget proposal that builds upon last year’s historic housing investment­s.

After securing an unpreceden­ted $1.75 billion for housing production last year, Newsom this year plans to allocate an additional $500 million annually for the state’s housing tax credit program — a key source of funding for affordable housing.

But the main housing thrust of Newsom’s fiscal 2021 budget revolves around homelessne­ss, which he called “the issue that defines our times.”

Newsom previewed his intent earlier this week when he announced plans to launch a new $750 million fund to build housing for the state’s homeless population, and to help people at risk of homelessne­ss make their rent payments. The fund, called the California Access to Housing and Services Fund, will be administer­ed by the state’s Department of Social Services.

“We have never done this in the past,” Newsom said Friday. We believe this is the first-in-the-nation state-based housing vehicle of its type. It’s a novel strategy. It’s a new strategy.”

Even so, some affordable housing advocates were disappoint­ed this year’s state budget didn’t include the same sweeping new funding and programs for housing production as last year’s.

The governor’s office warned the affordable housing community ahead of time that there weren’t sufficient resources to continue last year’s investment­s, said Matt Schwartz, president and CEO of the California Housing Partnershi­p.

“It’s concerning, however, that there still are no signs of a comprehens­ive plan to get us to the several million new homes that the governor has set as a goal, and that we’re all striving towards,” Schwartz said.

While campaignin­g for office, Newsom had said the state needed 3.5 million new homes to escape the housing crisis, and he aimed to get them built by 2025. But on Friday, Newsom pulled back from that goal, saying his office is refining that number using new data.

“That 3½ million goal was a stretch goal,” he said.

Newsom portrayed his budget, which will be revised in May and then must be approved by the Legislatur­e, as a balanced compromise.

The budget — $222.2 billion in all — includes a projected $5.6 billion surplus.

“We have to be prudent. We have to balance budgets. And we have to meet this crisis head-on,” Newsom said during a question-and-answer session after his budget presentati­on. “And I think we’re doing both.”

A group of organizati­ons, including The NonProfit Housing Associatio­n of Northern California and the Western Center on Law and Poverty, had pushed the governor to invest $5 billion in housing and homelessne­ss with the budget.

“The budget released today is an encouragin­g next step, with a number of important new investment­s,” Ray Pearl, executive director of the California Housing Consortium, wrote in a news release. “But to build all of the affordable homes we need, we have to think even bigger — matching new and continuing state investment­s with the scale of the problem and making structural changes in the way the state finances and supports affordable housing.”

Newsom also set aside funds to address homelessne­ss by transformi­ng the Medi-Cal system to better treat mental illness among those experienci­ng

homelessne­ss. Those funds bring the grand total of homelessne­ss-related funds in the fiscal 2021 budget to more than $1 billion. Newsom earmarked about $1 billion for homelessne­ss in last fiscal year’s budget as well.

Newsom on Friday focused on how his office is deploying the $1.75 billion earmarked for housing production in the current budget.

“The good news is the money now will start flowing,” he said.

Funds to help cities and counties build the sewers, roads and other infrastruc­ture needed to support housing developmen­t will go out starting this month, and the total $500 million will be allocated by April, he said.

The $500 million Newsom allocated last fiscal year for housing constructi­on through low-income tax credits also will go out this year, he said.

To boost housing constructi­on, Newsom emphasized the need to pass strong legislatio­n this year.

When asked specifical­ly about Senate Bill 50 — state Sen. Scott Wiener’s controvers­ial zoning reform bill — Newsom, as he has done many times before, stopped short of fully endorsing the bill.

“We need to get something done, and we’re working aggressive­ly to do that,” he said.

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 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom gestures toward a chart showing the growth of the state’s rainy day fund as he discusses his proposed fiscal 2021state budget in Sacramento on Friday.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Gavin Newsom gestures toward a chart showing the growth of the state’s rainy day fund as he discusses his proposed fiscal 2021state budget in Sacramento on Friday.

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