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San Francisco warns 2,000 people could be evicted if Trump yanks housing funds

San Francisco warns 2,000 people could be evicted if Trump yanks housing funds

Politico06-05-2025

San Francisco is joining a coalition of local governments to sue the Trump administration over new requirements which, they say, could threaten hundreds of millions of dollars in federal homelessness grants.
Nearly 2,000 people in the Bay Area city alone could lose their subsidies and face eviction if the federal funding is cut off, San Francisco officials argued in
a Monday court filing
.
The lawsuit, filed Friday in a U.S. District Court in Seattle, aims to prevent the administration from adding strings to Department of Housing and Urban Development funding related to DEI, immigration enforcement, abortion and 'gender ideology,' arguing the agency lacks the authority to do so without congressional approval. The coalition also includes Santa Clara County, two counties in Washington state, Boston, New York City and Columbus, Ohio.
'The Trump administration is trying to impose grant conditions that are that are unlawful,' San Francisco District Attorney David Chiu said in an interview Monday. 'From our perspective, these conditions blatantly violate the Constitution and endanger people's lives, and we need to oppose those efforts and stand up in court for this funding in our communities.'
San Francisco's Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing receives more than $56 million dollars from HUD in the form of 35 program grants, according to the Monday filing. The money mostly goes toward rental assistance and supportive services to house chronically homeless residents.
Chiu said local governments around the country had been engaging in 'intense discussion' in recent weeks over the new funding strings. He said his office is bringing the lawsuit instead of Attorney General Rob Bonta because 'it's local jurisdictions that are experiencing it and can prove the harm.'

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