Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday announced that he will convene local leaders in mid-November to review the state’s collective approach to homelessness and identify new strategies to better address the growing homelessness crisis.
Until this convening, the state will hold on providing the remaining third round of Homelessness Housing, Assistance and Prevention, or HHAP, grants.
“Californians demand accountability and results, not settling for the status quo,” said Gov. Newsom. “As a state, we are failing to meet the urgency of this moment. Collectively, these plans set a goal to reduce street homelessness 2% statewide by 2024. At this pace, it would take decades to significantly curb homelessness in California — this approach is simply unacceptable. Everyone has to do better — cities, counties and the state included. We are all in this together.”
All together, the plans result in just a 2% decrease of homelessness over four years statewide.
While some plans show local leaders taking aggressive action to combat homelessness, others are less ambitious — some plans even reflect double-digit increases in homelessness over four years, Newsom’s office said.
Newsom is calling all local jurisdictions together for a meeting in mid-November to coordinate on an approach that will deliver more substantial results.
Newsom’s office said this meeting will be an opportunity to learn from one another about what works, as well as to identify barriers that inhibit the progress we all want to make and strategies to remove them.
The third round of HHAP grants provides a share of $1 billion to every county, Continuum of Care, and the 13 largest cities in the state, on the condition that each local government has a plan approved by the state that reduces the number of unsheltered homeless individuals and increases permanent housing.
The state has so far provided over $1.5 billion of flexible emergency aid to address homelessness through the Homeless Emergency Aid Program and the first two rounds of HHAP funding.
Now, for the first time, recipients of the third round of HHAP funding have new requirements and must create a Homelessness Action Plan that addresses, in detail, local actions to prevent and reduce the number of individuals experiencing homelessness at the community level.
The plans must include a landscape analysis that assesses the current number of people experiencing homelessness in a given community and identify all existing programs, and all sources of funding aimed at tackling this crisis.
Additionally, the plans must include outcome-driven results and strategies for achieving these goals using clear metrics to track success.
The HHAP program is part of a $15.3 billion, multi-year state effort to turn the tide on homelessness — an all-of-the-above approach that includes cutting red tape and funding the largest expansion of homeless housing in California history.
Newsom calls for more aggressive action on homelessness, pauses latest round of state funding
- GOVERNOR’S OFFICE