The Mercury News

Newsom seeking additional funding

Bay Area is a key part of homeless housing drive

- By Marisa Kendall mkendall@bayareanew­sgroup.com

As Project Homekey funds begin to dry up, Gov. Gavin Newsom is seeking an extra $200 million to help more cities and counties convert property into homeless housing.

If approved by the state’s Joint Legislativ­e Budget Committee, the request would increase the innovative program’s buying power by a third, allowing it to fund 20 more projects currently on a waitlist. So far, Project Homekey has allocated $ 449.9 million of its $600 million budget, funding 3,351 new housing units. Newsom announced 19 new projects, including one in Alameda County, on Monday.

“Not only is Homekey unpreceden­ted in providing capital to house people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, but we are moving with unpreceden­ted speed,” Newsom wrote in a news release. “Most of these projects will be ready to house people very soon after the acquisitio­ns are complete, providing immediate help to our most vulnerable residents.”

Among the $ 137 million awarded in the third round of funding Monday, nearly $14.5 million went to Alameda County to purchase a Comfort Inn in Oakland and turn it into permanent supportive housing for formerly homeless residents.

The 104-room hotel has been operating since March as an isolation and quarantine site for COVID-19 patients who have nowhere else to go. But recently, demand for that ser vice has dwindled, and the county’s two quarantine hotels have been no more than 30% full, said Kerry Abbott, director of A lameda County’s Office of Homeless Care and Coordinati­on. As the Comfort Inn transition­s to long

term housing, COVID patients will move to the hotel next door.

“We’re really excited about it ,” Abbot t said about turning the hotel into long- term housing. “It’s an amazing opportunit­y because the price is very reasonable. So the amount that we’re able to acquire the site for ends up being under $150,000 per room … Supportive housing ty pically costs three times that or more.”

Newsom launched Project Homekey earlier this year as a way to provide long- term housing for homeless residents who had been moved off the street and into temporary hotel rooms and other shelters during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But it quickly became

apparent that $ 600 million wouldn’t be nearly enough to fund all the applicatio­ns that came flooding in from throughout the state. Project Homekey received 138 applicatio­ns requesting nearly $1.06 billion.

Alameda County submitted four applicatio­ns in all, and just one has been approved so far. Another is on the governor’s waitlist, and could be funded if the Newsom gets his extra $200 million.

“We’ll keep our fingers crossed,” Abbott said.

Projects in the f ivecounty Bay Area have been awarded more than $150 million. Local buildings that will be turned into homeless housing with Homekey funds include a college dormitory in Oakland, and hotels and motels in Milpitas, San Jose, Pittsburg and San Francisco. The funds also will go toward a modular home

developmen­t in Mountain View.

Additional awards announced Monday include nearly $ 4.3 million to the city of Stockton to buy and renovate a 39- unit motel and turn it into permanent housing. The Sacramento Housing and Redevelopm­ent Agency won almost $ 12.5 million to convert a hotel into interim housing for households that are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless, and have been impacted by COV ID-19. T he Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles won $ 48.5 million for five projects totalling 269 units, and funds also went to Long Beach, Scotts Valley, and Santa Barbara, Sutter, Humboldt, Los Angeles, Tulare, Tehama, Del Norte, Lake and Mariposa counties.

 ?? JANE TYSKA – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A man stands by his tent at homeless encampment on Martin Luther King Jr. Way in Oakland in July.
JANE TYSKA – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A man stands by his tent at homeless encampment on Martin Luther King Jr. Way in Oakland in July.

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