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California Governor Gavin Newsom (then Lieutenant Governor) riding in the Golden State Warriors Parade in Oakland, CA, Jun. 12, 2018. (Photo: Amir Aziz/Shutterstock)

Gov. Newsom Announces $156.4 Million Project Homekey Expansion

‘Homeless people don’t really trust these types of hotel housing sites’

By Evan Symon, November 9, 2023 2:30 am

Governor Gavin Newsom announced on Wednesday that Project Homekey will be expanding once again, sending a total of $156.4 million in grants to six counties across California.

According to Newsom and a parallel announcement by the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), the funding announced on Wednesday is the second batch of funding to be released from the round three of Project Homekey funding, which was allotted a total of $736 million in March. Los Angeles County received the most funding from the second batch, receiving a total of $74.7 million. Most notable amongst the LA projects are a $32 million project to buy a former Motel 6 and convert it to an interim homeless housing center with 111 rooms and a $20 million to create a permanent supportive housing center with 58 rooms converted from a former hotel.

Alameda County received the second most of funding, getting $34.5 million for three projects. These include a $15.5 million project to convert a hotel into a 48 room center for those experiencing homelessness, and both San Leandro and a joint Hayward and Union City project getting $10 million each for similar conversion programs.

The other four counties are only getting funding for one project each. San Francisco is to get $18.2 million for the conversion of the 67 room 685 Ellis hotel into a interim homeless housing site that will later convert to permanent. The other three will have more straight conversion projects for former hotels, with Fresno getting $16.5 million for a 58 unit site, Salinas getting $8 million for a 39 unit site, and Riverside is to get $4.5 million for a 25 unit site focusing on youth who are at-risk for homelessness.

While the $156.4 million allotted on Wednesday is less than other Project Roomkey and other similar homeless funding projects this year, such as a $200 million package announced in June, Newsom and others touted the new funding as critical.

“Homekey continues to demonstrate that we can build quickly, and at a fraction of the usual cost, to deliver much-needed affordable homes for Californians struggling to find a place to live,” said Newsom in a statement. “There’s still more work ahead, but the state is confronting this housing crisis head on.”

HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez added, “It has been greatly rewarding to see the growth and impact of Homekey on California’s most vulnerable residents. To me, those 14,000 homes—while exciting—represent more than just buildings. They represent real people, and the opportunity for housing stability to greatly improve their quality of life.”

$156.4 million in funding

However, many homelessness experts have found the Governor’s Homekey funding to be misplaced, with some of his goals, such as a 15% reduction in homelessness statewide by 2025, to be unrealistic.

“Newsom is mostly focused on homeless and chronic homeless housing and is ignoring the ways to get rid of this long-term,” said Los Angeles homeless advocate  and housing placer Logan Kramer to the Globe. “First off, homeless people don’t really trust these types of hotel housing sites. They need flexible hours for work, or need more accessible locations so commutes aren’t long and they can build lives again. But these sites have curfews and assignments not based on their needs. He’s kind of just saying ‘Here is your free housing. Be Grateful.’ But people need more than just a place to sleep to get over homelessness. All Newsom is doing is making the problem less visible.”

“Job placement, to wean people off the system, is critical, as is access to healthcare, even if it is just a nearby free clinic. Low-income housing is also a big need. Also, the rules in the housing areas are busted. I mentioned the curfews, but there are no rules against panhandling or other things that will bring negative attention. Like drinking and drugs. My God, those are the top complaints of people we are in the process of placing. We need to vouch for them, and it makes it a lot harder when they are an addict refusing help.

“He is thinking that he can solve the homeless issue by just converting some hotels. No, this is a multi-step process. It’s frustrating that he and other aren’t getting this. That’s why prior Roomkey and Homekey projects failed. He focused on one area instead of seeing the big picture.”

More Homekey funding is expected to be released in 2024.

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8 thoughts on “Gov. Newsom Announces $156.4 Million Project Homekey Expansion

  1. Gov Gruesome once again expanding the worst idea ever, which no one likes, including the supposed “beneficiaries” of it. Typical.

  2. “Build it and they will come”
    Free paycheck, food, cell phone, medical and dental and a nice room to OD in.
    Meanwhile, taxpayers are being strangled by California’s one party train wreck, our kids are moving to other states for work and housing, and those that stay are not having kids at all. But those who refuse to contribute get to live here for free!

      1. That’s right, Fed Up and Chuckiechan.
        Newsom’s slogan for his long-awaited presidential run should be:
        “For a Nice Room to OD in, Vote Gavin Newsom”
        After all, because Newsom’s SO PROUD of Project Roomkey and all the rest of the ruinous garbage he has inflicted upon us, that should be his own precious slogan and not a barb used against him by opponents. Right?

  3. Typical Newsom move – all feelings & optics, no rational thought involved whatsoever…
    I think all that hair gel has rotted what little dyslexic brainpower he once might have had….

  4. Some of these Homeless Inc programs cream out only the top, high functioning “homeless”. Ones who have a work history, can follow rules, and otherwise could survive on their own. But probably not in the high cost areas where they chose to be “homeless”.

    Homeless Inc grabs the grant money, and nudges them them to get on with their lives. Then Homeless Inc roars they have the secret to “homeless success” and give us more money.

    While 80% of the vagrant problem remains on the streets and those who can function on their own anyway, harvest out all the taxpayer cash.

    Federal work camps on federal land and/or lock-down housing like, the old TB sanitariums, in the clean mountain air well removed from urban settings. Those are the only options tax payers should ever fund to “solve” the vagrant problem.

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