Newsom plans to rid state of camps
His unprecedented spending helps, but experts say we need more
After pouring an unprecedented $12 billion into homeless housing and services last year, Gov. Gavin Newsom now is turning to the massive tent camps, shanty-towns and make-shift RV parks that have taken over California’s streets, parks and open spaces during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In a never-before-seen effort, the governor is doling out $50 million this winter to help cities and counties clear out camps and house people living outside. San Jose, Richmond and Santa Cruz are among those that might benefit. Newsom hopes to increase
that investment 10-fold in the coming year’s budget and add $1.5 billion to house people with behavioral health conditions. In charge of it all will be Newsom’s new state homelessness council, co-chaired by none other than the face of California’s COVID response — Dr. Mark Ghaly.
“This is probably one-ofa-kind, once-in-a-lifetime type funding that we’re seeing from the state,” said Michelle Milam, crime prevention manager for the Richmond Police Department and a member of the city’s homelessness task force. “We’ve never seen this kind of investment from the state for encampments.”
She and other local officials and nonprofit leaders, who have been battling a growing homelessness crisis for years with little help from the state, are grateful and hopeful.
But, they say, the money won’t be nearly enough. The funds Newsom has set aside for encampments are one-time grants, not the kind of ongoing investment cities need to make a lasting dent in finding permanent homes for unhoused Californians, experts say.
They acknowledge that focusing on encampments is a smart political move by the governor, but getting people out of camps and into temporary shelters isn’t a solution if there is no affordable housing.
“I think we would want to look at it a little bit more holistically,” said Christopher Martin, policy director for the advocacy organization Housing California. “We need to address all facets of homelessness, not just encampments.”
Richmond is one of more than three dozen cities and counties that have applied for one of Newsom’s new encampment resolution grants, which will be awarded by March 1. Although there is about $50 million available, the state has received requests for $120 million. Newsom has proposed allocating another $500 million in this year’s budget.
If selected, Richmond would use the money to clear a camp of more than 100 people living off Castro Street in cars, RVS and trailers.
Echoing the experience of many cities, such camps exploded in Richmond during the pandemic as shelters reduced their capacity and federal health officials recommended leaving encampments be. With the money from the state — Milam is hoping for several million dollars — Richmond would create a housing trust fund exclusively for Castro Street occupants to use for rent, job training, vehicle repairs and anything else that could help them move into stable housing.
“It’s more than just closing down an encampment,” Milam said. “It’s making sure people have an opportunity to successfully transition.”
San Jose also has applied for a grant, requesting $2 million to house people camped along the Guadalupe River Trail between Arena Green and the Children’s Discovery Museum.
And in Santa Cruz County, officials are hoping the money would help them try out a new strategy that gets people more involved in finding their own housing, said Robert Ratner, the county’s director of Housing for Health. They would award “housing scholarships” to encampment residents, and then work with the residents to spend that money in whatever way makes most sense for them.
The governor’s office also is leading a “100-day challenge” this year focused on homeless encampments.