What Happens to Homeless People after Encampment Sweeps? That’s on Cities, Gavin Newsom Says

CalMatters
CalMatters
CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics. (Articles are published in partnership with edhat.com)
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Gov. Gavin Newsom helps cleanup a homeless encampment along a freeway in San Diego, on Jan. 12, 2022. Photo by Mike Blake, Reuters

By Marisa Kendall, CalMatters

Whose fault is the California homelessness crisis?

According to Gov. Gavin Newsom, cities and counties are to blame for failing to get people off the street — despite all the money he’s given them to do so.

That was the message the governor pushed today as he signed a package of housing and homelessness bills at an event in San Francisco with legislators, carpenters’ union members, and members of the press.

“There’s never been more support to address all of those concerns than in the last four or five years,” Newsom said. “So what gives? Time to do your job. Time to address the crisis of encampments on the streets in this state. And yes, I’m not going to back off from that. And you will see that reflected in my January budget. I’m going to fund success and I’m not going to fund the rhetoric of failure anymore.”

When asked by a reporter how the state will make sure cities such as San Francisco meet their housing goals, Newsom said: “(It’s) not the state’s job to figure out how to do that.” Instead, Newsom said his office is focused on enforcing housing laws; It threatened the city of Norwalk with legal action earlier this week.

No local government, no local jurisdiction, no local entity needs to do everything,” said Attorney General Rob Bonta, also at Thursday’s press conference. “But every jurisdiction, every local government needs to do something. They need to participate. They need to build housing in their jurisdiction.”

Speaking at an affordable housing development in San Francisco, Newsom also gave an update on the $6.4 billion mental health and housing bond passed earlier this year. The state will use $2.2 billion to extend Homekey, which helps cities and counties turn hotels and other buildings into homeless housing. The new program, dubbed Homekey+, will start doling out funds in May 2025 for housing for people with mental health and/or substance use disorders.

The 32 housing and homelessness bills Newsom signed Thursday include:

SB 7 by Sen. Catherine Blakespear: requires local governments to plan housing for their lowest-income residents

This article was originally published by CalMatters.

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CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics. (Articles are published in partnership with edhat.com)

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7 Comments

      • I read Newsom was leaving it up to local governments after he orders the homeless scattered. He apparently wants a hodge bodge of solutions, hundreds of different solutions by all governments, none of which will work, rather than use the power and ability of the state to come up with a unified solution. A fool! A good sign he is befuddled by the problem.

        • RUBY – every city has it’s own unique circumstances, that’s the whole point. The state has has spent millions paying the cities who have done nothing to help the homeless. That is the problem here. Newsom can’t issue a one-size-fits-all solution to every city in the state. No one can, they have different circumstances. He’s given them money, now it’s up to them to analyze their situation and do something.

          Not sure what “gibberish” you’re talking about, but that’s just how it is.

          You have any suggestions? Besides your concentration camps, I mean.

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