Fed funds extended for Project Roomkey
After spending years in and out of homelessness and prison, Randy Scott was living beside a creek in San Pablo last spring when he was offered a motel room.
Eight months later, he’s an example of the good that can come from Project Roomkey — the statewide effort that has sheltered thousands of unhoused people in hotels and motels during the COVID-19 pandemic. He landed a job, got a driver’s license and a car, and opened a bank account.
“I’m more with the program now than I’ve ever been in my life, to be honest with you,” Scott, 56, said from his room in a Motel 6 in Pittsburg.
More people may soon get the same opportunity, thanks to President Joe Biden’s recent order extending federal funding for the program. Bay Area counties, which already have put up several thousand unhoused people in hotel rooms — are looking into extending hotel contracts, moving more people in and opening additional rooms. That’s music to the ears of activists who worried about shutting the hotel programs down even as the coronavirus continues to infect and kill at alarming rates.
“We’re still in a surge in the middle of really cold winter months,” said Vivian Wan, chief operating officer of Abode Services, which runs Roomkey hotels in Alameda and Santa Clara counties. “And I’m really excited that we’ll be able to potentially keep some of these hotels open for longer.”
Under former President Donald Trump, the Federal Emergency Management Agency reimbursed counties for 75% of the cost of leasing hotel rooms for unhoused people 65 and older or with health conditions that made them vulnerable to coronavirus. Counties used federal CARES Act funding to help cover the other 25%, but as that expired at the end of last year, some Bay Area officials began moving to close the hotel shelters, worried they’d be left on the hook for massive bills.
Adding to the uncertainty, counties had to reapply for the funds every month, which opened up the possibility that they’d be cut off at any moment. FEMA changed that requirement in December and promised to continue funding the rooms until the pandemic is over, but that vague terminology left counties unsure what qualified as the “end” of the pandemic.
In one of Biden’s first actions as president, he upped the FEMA reimbursement to 100% and extended it through Sept. 30.
San Francisco Mayor London Breed called the move “really great news.”
“What that does for our budget is incredible,” she said during a news conference.
As a result, Breed directed her staff to look for additional hotels the city can consider adding to its Roomkey roster.
Contra Costa County already planned to keep its four Roomkey motels open through June — including Scott’s — but thanks to Biden’s order, now is looking at extending that timeline even further.
Alameda County was shutting down its Roomkey program in two hotels — one in Newark and one in Berkeley
— when Biden signed the order. Now those closures are on hold while the county “feverishly” works to determine whether it has the resources to extend those and other hotel contracts, said Kerry Abbott, director of the county’s Office of Homeless Care and Coordination.
The problem is Biden’s order didn’t come with additional funds to move more people from the hotels into permanent housing.
“We want to make sure we’re not put in a position where we have to open hotels and then close them without having identified housing for people,” Abbott said.
Counties and nonprofits already are working to find longterm homes for their motel guests, but housing is notoriously limited in the region.
Before Biden signed the executive order, Abode had moved 146 people out of the SpringHill Suites motel, to prepare for what was expected to be the imminent end of its contract. Out of everyone who left, 68% moved into permanent housing, and 8% moved into temporary housing. But another 16% remained homeless, returning to emergency shelters or the street. Throughout Alameda County, 341 Roomkey participants had found permanent housing as of Friday.
With police dealing more and more frequently with calls involving mental health crises, San Jose Police Department is taking a significant step toward changing how officers respond to those situations in a move lauded by health professionals.
A pilot program launched in October to connect dedicated San Jose police officers with behavioral health clinicians to respond to escalating mental health emergencies across Santa Clara County now will become a permanent full-time unit in the San Jose Police Department, a department spokesperson confirmed Feb. 5.
The decision, first reported by NBC Bay Area, comes less than a week after officers in the Police Department’s Mobile Crisis Response Team responded to the bludgeoning and stabbing of a decades-old 65-pound tortoise named Michelangelo with a garden post in a San Jose preschool garden.
The mobile crisis response team arrested the suspect, George Robles, booked him on charges of felony vandalism and animal abuse at the Santa Clara County jail and placed him on a 72-hour mental health evaluation hold, though he was released sooner and arrested again when he returned to the preschool just two days after the attack.
Although the team’s response to the tortoise attack was just one example of its work, acting Chief of Police Dave Tindall said in a statement earlier this week that the incident underscored the “need for continued collaboration with our mental health professionals.”
SJPD Sgt. Mike Porter, who will lead the new crisis response unit, is hiring eight officers for his team with the goal of getting the full-time unit up and running by the beginning of March.