

- Written by: Steve Mencher
- Written by: Kacey Sycamore
By Matt Levin, CalMatters
With a forecasted deficit of near-record proportions and an economy in freefall, homelessness and low-income housing advocates were braced for painful cuts in the revised budget proposal Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled Thursday.
But unlike some of the more severe pandemic-induced rollbacks Newsom outlined in areas like education and climate change, affordable housing and homelessness dollars were mostly spared from the administration’s fiscal cleaver.
Given an assist from the federal government’s March stimulus package, Newsom is proposing $750 million to buy hotels and motels currently used for emergency homeless housing, hoping to turn the properties into more permanent solutions. Another $500 million in tax credits for building low-income housing was preserved from Newsom’s pre-pandemic budget plans — a major win for affordable housing developers as they try to fill the state’s shortage of 1.3 million low-income homes.
(Image: LA County is working with state, federal and local partners on Project Roomkey, an initiative to bring medically vulnerable people experiencing homelessness indoors during the COVID19 pandemic. Photo by Michael Owen Baker, County of Los Angeles via Flickr)
“We are very encouraged to see the governor continue to prioritize housing and homelessness resources,” said Chris Martin, legislative advocate for the nonprofit advocacy group Housing California.
But while Newsom’s housing and homelessness budget was rosier than some had expected, the proposals still leave unanswered difficult questions that state lawmakers and the governor will have to settle before their June 15 constitutional deadline to pass a balanced budget:
- How many hotels and motels can be realistically transformed to permanent housing, and where will funding for services come from?
- What will the state do about the mounting levels of missed rent payments piling up for renters and landlords?
- What happens when federal emergency dollars dry up?
“A lot more needs to be done,” said Assemblyman Miguel Santiago, Democrat from Los Angeles, who has proposed legislation, backed by big-city mayors, to spend $2 billion annually for shelters, permanent housing and homeless services.
“At the end of the day, does it make sense to move at a breakneck speed to house thousands of people during the emergency phase of the pandemic, and then throw everyone out on the streets when it’s over?”
Here’s what else you need to know about Newsom’s housing and homelessness budget in a pandemic-induced recession.
What was proposed before we talked about “bleach injections“
Before phrases like “social distancing” and “mask hoarding” entered the day-to-day lexicon, Newsom staked much of his political capital on fixing the state’s painfully visible homelessness woes. His January budget included a one-time infusion of $750 million in new state homelessness dollars, the most California had devoted to the issue in recent memory. It also proposed a new system of bypassing local governments to deliver those dollars directly to homeless services providers, along with hundreds of millions to reform the state’s low-income health insurance program to pay for things like housing and addiction services.
Another item Newsom put forward: an additional $500 million in tax credits for low-income housing developers. In his February State of State address, Newsom even flirted with broader ambitions laid forth by his homelessness task force, including ongoing homelessness spending housing providers could rely on every year.
What’s been tossed
Reforms that would have provided more funding to homeless utilizers of Medi-Cal health services — and tapped more federal dollars in the process — have been put on indefinite hold. Roughly $500 million approved in last year’s budget for things like mixed-income housing developments and new housing near transit was clawed back before it could be tapped by developers and cities scrambling to make projects “pencil out.” And the more ambitious plans, like the new system for delivering state homelessness dollars via “regional coordinators,” or imposing a state mandate to force local governments to make progress on their homeless populations (a plan Newsom never really embraced), have been ditched for now.
What’s left, now that we’re broke
The $750 million from the state for more general homelessness funding has been replaced by $750 million from the federal government for a specific purpose: buying some of the 15,000 hotel rooms the state has procured to provide emergency pandemic housing for the unhoused. Right now more than 7,000 of those rooms have been occupied, although the state does not track how many of those occupants are there for temporary quarantines as opposed to longer stays. The clock is ticking on the hotel purchases: The state has to make them by the end of the year or it loses the federal money.
With the federal funding restricted to acquiring and converting hotels to more permanent housing, Newsom is hoping counties and cities can fund homeless services like social workers and counselors with more than a billion in other federal pandemic supports, some homelessness specific and others for general coronavirus response. So far finding available hotels and motels for temporary homeless housing has proved less of a hurdle than staffing the hotels with appropriate health and safety net workers.
Finally, Newsom is keeping the $500 million in tax credits for low-income housing he proposed in January. Perhaps even more auspicious for low-income housing advocates, the vast majority of housing programs aren’t subject to $15 billion in “trigger cuts” Newsom warned would happen if more federal funding for states and local governments did not materialize.
What was conspicuously absent
Newsom’s pandemic-revised budget contains no new plan to help California renters and landlords beset by missed rent payments, a “looming crisis” for the state’s cash-strapped tenants. While the governor wants to push a $330 million windfall from a Great Recession-era lawsuit settlement to mortgage relief and legal aid clinics, that money is prohibited from being spent on rental assistance. Newsom administration officials have touted the rent relief package in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s most recent stimulus proposal, which would require signoff by both Senate Republicans and President Donald Trump.
What happens next
While Newsom’s housing and homelessness budget wasn’t as brutal as some were expecting, Democratic lawmakers and advocacy groups will still be fighting tooth and nail for additional funding they believe is necessary to ensure the governor delivers on pre-pandemic rhetoric.
At the top of the homelessness debate will be requests for billions in ongoing funds — money local governments and service providers can bank on every year to build shelters, operate converted motel rooms, and build permanent housing. Santiago’s proposal for $2 billion a year in new state homelessness funding does not identify a new revenue source (read: tax increase), meaning lawmakers would have to find $2 billion in cuts elsewhere. Another proposal from Sen. Jim Beall, Democrat from San Jose, similarly proposes roughly $2 billion per year for the next four years for homelessness and low-income housing development without specifying a new source of dollars.
Assemblyman David Chiu, Democrat from San Francisco, hopes his plan to eliminate the mortgage interest deduction on vacation homes to raise hundreds of millions in homelessness dollars will finally get through. His proposal has failed in past years.
“In this crisis we should be addressing the suffering on our streets rather than the tax breaks of the wealthy few who have vacation homes,” said Chiu.
Beyond the tug-of-war on homelessness dollars, lawmakers and Newsom will have to decide whether the state can afford a major rent forgiveness program, and if so how it should be structured.
State Senate Democratic leaders unveiled a plan they estimate would cost $300 million to $500 million per year that would allow renters to pay back missed rents over the course of decade, while compensating landlords with transferable tax credits. A separate landlord supported proposal would create a state program that would pay for 80% of missed rent payments.
CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
- Written by: Kacey Sycamore
By Jacqueline García, La Opinión
California’s undocumented immigrants can begin applying Monday for disaster relief payments of up to $1,000 per household under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s coronavirus emergency assistance plan.
In April, Newsom announced a one-time, $75-million fund for undocumented adults who are not eligible for other forms of government assistance, such an unemployment benefits and federal stimulus checks. A qualifying undocumented adult can receive $500, with a maximum of $1,000 per household.
Since the announcement was made, many undocumented immigrants have been waiting for information to apply as soon as the application period opened.
California has more than two million undocumented immigrants. Nearly one in ten workers is undocumented.
With the funds spread among so many people, most families will not receive the funding. Applications are approved on a first-come, first-served basis, until the money runs out.
“In the best case scenario, these funds would reach one in 10 people,” said Unai Montes-Irueste, director of communications with United Ways of California.
Magdalena, 47, an undocumented essential worker who up until recently worked making face masks in a sewing factory, hopes to receive the assistance.
“I haven’t worked for about a week because my 74-year-old mother became ill and we don’t know if she has the coronavirus,” said Magdalena, who preferred not to give her last name because of her undocumented status.
Magdalena said if she receives help from the state government, she could close the gap on her lack of income, which affects her family of four.
“This money would help me pay the rent,” she said.
Another possible beneficiary is Julio Peralta, 45, a single father of a 16-year-old son and a 12-year-old daughter with spina bifida.
Peralta said that none of them has a legal status in the country since they arrived in Los Angeles from Guatemala five years ago in hopes of obtaining a cure for his daughter.
“But right now with the pandemic, I already fell behind on my rent payments for April and May,” said Peralta, who is not working.
Peralta said if he receives the financial aid from the government, he would use the money to find a place to live in Los Angeles since his daughter is receiving treatment at the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
“But I don’t know how it is applied,” he said.
The process of applying
Montes-Irueste of United Ways of California — which has helped undocumented immigrants without bank accounts during the pandemic — said it is important for people to know where to get help and avoid being scammed.
Called the Disaster Relief Assistance for Immigrants Project, the $75 million in state funding will be distributed to 12 organizations throughout California.
Additionally, the governor said $50 million would be available from philanthropy groups to be supervised through the organization Grantmakers Concerned with Immigrants and Refugees (GCIR). However, as of Thursday, only $13 million had been collected from philanthropy through immigrantfundca.org.
The organizations were selected from among Immigration Services Financing contractors who have existing agreements with the state. The state Department of Social Services also selected nonprofits that have the ability to provide a high volume of application assistance services to undocumented populations in specific geographic locations.
Applications will be available until funds for each region are exhausted.
Eligibility
An applicant must be undocumented, over 18 years of age, ineligible for federal assistance related to COVID-19 such as the stimulus check or unemployment benefits, and able to demonstrate that they have faced financial difficulties as a result of the pandemic.
Organizations will verify the applicant’s documents to ensure they match the information provided and will make the final decisions.
To apply, undocumented immigrants should contact the group representing their area:
Northern California:
California Human Development Corporation
(707) 228-1338 www.californiahumandevelopment.org/
Covering Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Del Norte, El Dorado, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Mendocino, Modoc, Napa, Nevada, Pleasure, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma Tehama, Trinity
Bay Area:
Catholic Charities of California
Alameda and Contra Costa: www.cceb.org
Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo: www.catholiccharitiessf.org/
Santa Clara: www.catholiccharitiesscc.org/
Central Coast:
Mixteco / Indígena Community Organizing Project (MICOP)
www.mixteco.org/drai/3
Santa Barbara: (805) 519-7776
Ventura: (805) 519-7774
Community Action Board Santa Cruz
(800) 228-6820 www.cabinc.org/
Covering Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz
Central Valley:
United Farm Workers Foundation (UFWF)
(877) 527-6660 www.ufwfoundation.org
Covering Ash, Kern, Kings, Wood, Merced, Tulare and Mono
California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation (CRLAF)
(877) 557-0521 www.crlaf.org/drai
Covering Mariposa, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tuolumne Yolo and Yuba
Los Angeles and Orange County:
Asian Americans Advancing Justice
(213) 241-8880 www.advancingjustice-la.org
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA)
(213) 201-8700 www.chirla.org
Los Angeles Central American Resource Center (CARECEN)
(213) 315-2659 www.carecen-la.org/
Inland Empire:
San Bernardino Community Service Center
(888) 444-0170, (909) 521-7535 www.sbcscinc.org
Covering Inyo, Riverside, San Bernardino
TODEC Legal Center Perris
(888) 863-3291 www.TODEC.org
Covering Inyo, Riverside, San Bernardino
San Diego and Imperial County
Jewish Family Service of San Diego
Imperial County: 760-206-3242
San Diego County: 858-206-8281
Jacqueline García is a reporter with La Opinión. This article is part of The California Divide, a collaboration among newsrooms examining income inequity and economic survival in California.
- Written by: Kacey Sycamore
Sonoma County voters can now sign up for a program to track their vote-by-mail ballot from the time it’s mailed to when it’s counted.
The “Where’s My Ballot?” program from the Secretary of State’s Office allows the voter to receive updates on the location of their ballot via text, email or voicemail in real time.
“This is an exciting opportunity for our County to participate in a program to increase transparency around the ballot process, allow voters to receive status updates on their ballots, and help our office communicate important information to voters,” said Sonoma County Clerk Deva Marie Proto in a press release. “This information includes deadlines for returning ballots, when a voter can expect their ballot to arrive in their mailbox, when the ballot is received by the office, when the ballot is counted and if there are any issues with the ballot.”
Voters can sign up to participate at http://wheresmyballot.sos.ca.gov/.
The “Where’s My Ballot” program is currently being offered by 25 other California Election Offices, with more expected to participate before the November 2020 election. It’s offered at no cost to the county.
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- Firing Forests to Save Them: Could Native Traditions Save Lives?
- A Statewide Flex Alert Calls for Energy Conservation on Tuesday, June 11
- Petaluma Business Leaders Work to Prevent Opioid Deaths
- Report Warns 2020 Census Could Undercount Millions
- Yolo County's Sand Fire Forces Evacuations Near Guinda
- Against All Odds, Paradise Students Graduate on Home Campus
- Grist Finds Link Between Pollution and Infant Death in San Bernardino
- Santa Rosa High School Lockdown Lifted, Suspect in Custody
- Citizen Input Sought for Santa Rosa's Future
- Reveal Finds Rampant Wage Theft in the Caregiving Industry
- KRCB TV Highlights the Wine Industry’s Unsung Heroes
- Local Activists Bring Green New Deal Principles to Sonoma
- Capital Public Radio Announces Move to Downtown Sacramento
- Activist Group Sues County Over Andy Lopez Records
- Hope for Sonoma's Coast; Other Calif. Areas Under Siege
- Sonoma County Activists Address Climate Change at Town Hall
- Mormon Temple in Oakland Open to Public for Limited Time
- Israel's Consul General in S.F. Condemns Anti-Semitism
- Kaiser CEO Tyson Meets with Families on Mental Health
- Prepare for Disasters by Getting to Know Your Neighbors
- Pulitzer Prize-winning Poet: 'I Love Petaluma'
- New Health Officer Tackles Measles and Other Top Concerns
- FEMA Hosts Disaster Preparedness Symposium in Santa Rosa
- Political Cartoonist Speaks on the Importance of Satire
- Sonoma County Sheriff Releases Andy Lopez Case Files
- Alegría De La Cruz, Newest Schools Trustee, Aims at Equity
- More Coffey Park Residents Begin to Return Home
- Family Turns Grief to Activism After Daughter's Suicide
- News: Connect the Bay Follow Up -Your Housing Questions Answered
- Fishermen Cautiously Optimistic About Salmon Season Forecast
- Meet the New Director of Sonoma County's Watchdog Office
- Crab Season Ends Early to Protect Whales
- YWCA Educates Public on Domestic Abuse After Recent Tragedies
- Santa Rosa City Council Skeptical of Regional Housing Plan
- Guerneville Residents Work to Repair Their Homes, Lives
- Guerneville Businesses Work to Reopen A Month After Flood
- Barlow Tenants Question Why Flood Plan Didn’t Work
- Miss Sonoma County 2019 Breaks Down Barriers
- Garden Society Presents Pot Podcast and Products for Women
- City of Healdsburg Tables Renter Protection Ordinance
- Landslide Threatens Several Homes in Forestville
- Counties: No Criminal Charges Against PG&E in 2017 Wildfires
- Greg Sarris: Author, Professor, Chairman of Local Tribe
- Sonoma County Emergency Manager Speaks on Flood Recovery
- Sonoma County Residents Search for Flood Recovery Assistance
- Rep. Huffman Tours Barlow in Sebastopol Following Flood
- Russian River Flood Recovery Resource Page
- Santa Rosa Declares Local Emergency; No Worry Yet on Water
- Sebastopol Voters Debate Leasing Local Hospital
- New SSU Exec Commits to Diversity, First Generation Students
- Healdsburg Mayor David Hagele Defends Housing Budget
- Northern Elephant Seals Take Over Drake's Beach at Point Reyes
- Legal Marijuana Makes Talking About Safety Harder for Some Parents
- Petaluma Mayor Teresa Barrett Hopes to Tackle Housing Shortage
- Windsor Mayor Foppoli: No Use Fighting District Elections
- David Rabbitt Steps in as Chair of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors
- California Senator Dodd Reacts to State of the State Address
- Gov. Newsom State of the State: Housing, Health, PG&E, Trump
- North Bay Celebrates Annual Pliny the Younger Release
- Scientists Release Scale Ranking Atmospheric River Intensity
- Local Agencies Address Flood Control on Russian River
- French WW II Spy Brings Story of Courage to Petaluma
- Mayor Amy Harrington Talks About Upcoming Changes for 2019
- Informe: County Sheriff Plans Better Community Relations
- Informe: Essick, Sonoma County Sheriff Plans Prison Reform
- Informe: Santa Rosa Mayor Questions Need for Translations
- Informe: Santa Rosa's Mayor on the City's Homeless Crisis
- Informe: Santa Rosa Mayor Schwedhelm Lays Out Priorities
- Informe: Tom Schwedhelm Becomes Santa Rosa Mayor
- Santa Rosa Mayor Talks About his Priorities for 2019
- Volunteers Help Sonoma County Track Homelessness
- Santa Rosa Women’s March Spurs Excitement for 2020 Elections
- PG&E Bankruptcy Imminent; Banks Offer Billions in Financing
- Political Forum Blue-Green Eggs and Ham Draws Over 400
- 'Zero Waste' on KRCB TV in the North Bay - Jan 22; We Revisit Radio Report
- Council Member Victoria Fleming Talks About Goals for 2019
- Santa Rosa Diocese Releases List of Clergy Members Accused of Abuse
- Fear of Gangs Driving Central Americans North: Podcast
- New Sonoma County Sheriff Hopes to Improve Community Relations
- Report Highlights Sonoma County Employment Trends
- Rep. Jackie Speier Suggests Border Compromise via DACA
- Snoopy's Home Ice to Celebrate 50th Anniversary in 2019
- Living with Lead: 'Like Crabs in a Barrel'
- Living Downstream Preview: Tour Uncovers Richmond Poisons
- Native Fire Practices Can Make Communities Safer
- Community Health Workers Help Gain Environmental Justice
- Woodstock and Red-Haired Girl Get Their Day in 2019
- County Agrees to $3 Million Lopez Settlement
- Emerald Cup Draws Cannabis Experts, Entrepreneurs and Fans
- Emerald Cup Prize to Willie Nelson, Others Enjoy Legal Smoke
- Sonoma Residents Work to Reduce Health Disparities
- Journalist Tess Vigeland Leads Camp Fire Reporting Effort
- Sexual Assault Prevention Educator Opposes Title IX Changes
- Coffey Strong Heads to Butte County to Share Advice
- Immigration Tied to Benefits? County Schools Head Says No
- North Bay Residents Offer Hope, Aid to Camp Fire Evacuees
- Sonoma County to Create New Emergency Management Department
- Community Members Debate How to Best Spend Homelessness Aid Grant
- Santa Rosa Official Offers Advice to Camp Fire Survivors
- Santa Rosa City Council Votes to Extend Renter Protections
- California Seeks Input on Housing Recovery Funds
- Dogs Compete in Sheep Herding at Hopland Research Center
- Santa Rosa Hosts 2018 California Economic Summit
- In Short Time, Conductor Lecce-Chong Puts Stamp on Symphony
- Music Inspires Climate Activists at Global Summit
- Climate Summit Contest: Unlikely Company Wins Funding
- Displaced Camp Fire Evacuees Consider What Comes Next
- Camp Fire Evacuees Sleep in Cars, Tents in Chico Parking Lot
- Poor Air Quality Poses Health Hazard for Workers
- Commentary: One Year On, Cannabis Legalization Mostly On Track
- KRCB's Steve Mencher and Adia White Discuss the Midterm Election
- Equity a Key Topic at 26th Annual Latino Health Forum
- Shomrei Torah Hosts Service for Tree of Life Shooting Victims
- The Difficult Birth of the Graton Resort and Casino
- Santa Rosa Voters Deliberate Affordable Housing Measure
- Sonoma County Works to Finalize Disaster Recovery Plan
- As City Builds New Park in Roseland, Whose Voices Are Heard?
- Sebastopol Building First in the Region to Use Hempcrete
- $12 Million in State Funds to Aid the Homeless in Sonoma Co.
- 'Pictures of a Gone City' Presents Bay Area, Warts and All
- Sonoma Co. Releases Results of Emergency Alert Tests
- Huffman Opponent Dale Mensing Supports Trump and DACA
- Rep. Jared Huffman Running on Accomplishments and Opposition to Trump
- One Year After the Oct. Wildfires, Many Families Are Still Uprooted
- Coffey Park Resident Shares her Experience a Year after the Fires
- More Counseling Services Needed for Spanish Speakers
- On Fire Anniversary, Recalling 'Battle to Save Jack London's Mountain'