logo
California wrestles with approach to homeless encampments

California wrestles with approach to homeless encampments

Yahoo16-05-2025
May 16 (UPI) -- California Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his model ordinance to address homeless encampments with dignity this week but advocates say the approach ignores real solutions.
Newsom's ordinance "Addressing Encampments with Urgency and Dignity" calls on local jurisdictions to immediately begin removing homeless encampments, giving 48 hours notice when possible.
Jay Wierenga, deputy secretary of communications for the California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency, told UPI the issue of addressing encampments is ultimately a local issue.
"The governor's model ordinance is a template for them to address encampments with care, humanity and urgency," Wierenga said. "They can, and should, begin this work immediately. The governor's actions are reversing a crisis that is decades old, as the numbers show."
Newsom and the state government have blunted the growth of the population of unhoused people who are completely without shelter, according to Jennifer Hanson, assistant deputy director of external affairs for Housing and Community Development. Unsheltered homelessness grew by 7% in the United States but only 0.45% in California.
In the five years prior to Newsom being elected governor, unsheltered homelessness grew twice as fast, on average, than it has during Newsom's term, Hanson added.
"This administration is the first to have made addressing homelessness a top priority and has provided local governments with unprecedented assistance to address it," Hanson told UPI in an email. "California is now reversing decades of inaction."
The ordinance is backed, in part, by $3.3 billion in voter-approved Prop 1 funds. In the fall, the governor's office said the state invested $40 billion to create more housing and $27 billion to "help prevent and end homelessness."
The California State Association of Counties pushed back on the claim that $27 billion has gone to address homelessness, Jeff Griffiths, president and Inyo County supervisor, told UPI.
"Nearly half of that is for housing," Griffiths said. "It hasn't actually translated into units built on the ground that are sufficient enough to meet the scale of the problem."
Griffiths agrees that county leaders would like to see encampments cleared but Newsom's ordinance lacks any assurance that there will be shelter or transitional or permanent housing for people.
"The problem is clearing an encampment doesn't do anything if there's no place for those people to go," he said. "What we need are clearly delineated responsibilities of which level of government is responsible for which part of solving the homeless issue and then we need sustained funding."
California currently allocates $1 billion annually toward counties to address homelessness. This sum is spread across the 58 counties in the state.
Griffiths noted that this amount of funding is inadequate, and the short-term nature of providing funding annually makes it difficult for county governments to plan long-term solutions.
CSAS has designed its own framework for addressing homelessness in California, the At Home plan. It calls for a clearer breakdown of the roles of different levels of government in addressing the issue, increasing and maintaining affordable housing units to meet a variety of needs and increased outreach programs and workforce to support those programs.
The plan also calls for more social safety nets to prevent people from becoming homeless and the creation of programs and employment opportunities for people who are unhoused.
"We will continue to work in good faith on all of the initiatives for having a comprehensive solution to homelessness," Griffiths said. "We believe the framework is there to make a significant impact on this problem. We just need to get buy-in and support from the state."
Newsom's announcement of a model ordinance credits the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in the case Grants Pass, Ore., vs. Johnson for clarifying state and local governments' rights when addressing homeless encampments. Since that decision, more than 150 jurisdictions across more than 30 states have passed ordinances allowing them to punish people for camping on public property.
Jesse Rabinowitz, communications and campaign director for the National Homelessness Law Center, told UPI the broad attempt to criminalize homelessness is backed by the Cicero Institute.
The Cicero Institute is a conservative think tank that advocates for a complete ban on street camping. It also proposes that people not be allowed to sleep, camp or take long-term shelter on federal lands such as national parks.
In March, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to remove all homeless encampments located in national parks in the District of Columbia.
"California certainly has put money toward solutions to solve homelessness, like housing and support. It's not enough," Rabinowitz said. "This criminalization approach is going to dampen the effects of all the good work that service providers and activists on the ground have done in California."
"If we want to solve homelessness in California, we need to focus exclusively on what works, which is housing services, and not waste resources and time by punishing people, by displacing people and by arresting people for sleeping outside when they have nowhere to go," he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Obama applauds Newsom's California redistricting plan as Texas GOP pushes new maps
Obama applauds Newsom's California redistricting plan as Texas GOP pushes new maps

Boston Globe

time20 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Obama applauds Newsom's California redistricting plan as Texas GOP pushes new maps

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up According to organizers, the event raised $2 million for the National Democratic Redistricting Committee and its affiliates, one of which has filed and supported litigation in several states over GOP-drawn districts. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Eric Holder, who served as Obama's attorney general and heads up the group, also appeared. Advertisement The former president's comments come as Texas lawmakers return to Austin this week, renewing a heated debate over a new congressional map creating five new potential GOP seats. The plan is the result of prodding by President Donald Trump, eager to stave off a midterm defeat that would deprive his party of control of the House of Representatives. Texas Democratic lawmakers delayed a vote for 15 days by leaving the state in protest, depriving the House of enough members to do business. Advertisement Spurred on by the Texas situation, Democratic governors including Newsom have pondered ways to possibly strengthen their party's position by way of redrawing U.S. House district lines, five years out from the Census count that typically leads into such procedures. In California — where voters in 2010 gave the power to draw congressional maps to an independent commission, with the goal of making the process less partisan — Democrats have unveiled a proposal that could give that state's dominant political party an additional five U.S. House seats in a bid to win the fight to control of Congress next year. If approved by voters in November, the blueprint could nearly erase Republican House members in the nation's most populous state, with Democrats intending to win the party 48 of its 52 U.S. House seats, up from 43. A hearing over that measure devolved into a shouting match Tuesday as a Republican lawmaker clashed with Democrats, and a committee voted along party lines to advance the new congressional map. California Democrats do not need any Republican votes to move ahead, and legislators are expected to approve a proposed congressional map and declare a Nov. 4 special election by Thursday to get required voter approval. Newsom and Democratic leaders say they'll ask voters to approve their new maps only for the next few elections, returning map-drawing power to the commission following the 2030 census — and only if a Republican state moves forward with new maps. Obama applauded that temporary timeline. Advertisement 'And we're going to do it in a temporary basis because we're keeping our eye on where we want to be long term,' Obama said, referencing Newsom's take on the California plan. 'I think that approach is a smart, measured approach, designed to address a very particular problem in a very particular moment in time.'

California voters support EV tax incentives, but are wary of sales mandates says poll
California voters support EV tax incentives, but are wary of sales mandates says poll

Politico

time21 minutes ago

  • Politico

California voters support EV tax incentives, but are wary of sales mandates says poll

That question again showed a partisan divide, with 80 percent of Democrats saying they back the approach, compared with 60 percent of independent voters and just 43 percent of Republicans. But the overall result bolsters Newsom's push to backfill incentives that the Biden administration used to coax drivers off fossil fuels, as he suggested using cap-and-trade revenues last year and directed state agencies to consider in a June executive order. But Jack Citrin, a veteran political science professor at UC Berkeley and partner on the poll, said a closer look at the poll results shows that Democrats need to keep affordability in mind. He pointed to the fact that 28 percent of respondents said they'd support new EV incentives only if gas prices aren't impacted and another 20 percent said they should be reserved for low-income buyers, reflecting the fact that cost of living was the top concern of voters polled. And 64 percent of respondents said gasoline prices are putting a significant, extreme or moderate burden on their household budgets. 'That reflects a concern with the cost of all of this,' Citrin said. 'Yes, we're for environmental protection. Yes, we're for all of this, just as long as it doesn't cost a lot.' The poll comes as state agencies released a joint report Tuesday with recommendations for countering Trump's assault, calling on lawmakers to bolster tax incentives, improve charging infrastructure and regulate facilities that attract polluting trucks, but offering few specific timelines or dollar figures. CARB Chair Liane Randolph framed the report — which Newsom asked for in his June order — as a first step in the state's defense against a hostile federal government. 'Clean air efforts are under siege, putting the health of every American at risk,' she said during a press briefing. 'California is continuing to fight back and will not give up on cleaner air and better public health.' Sperling called the report a surprisingly 'modest document,' and said it lacks the specificity he hoped to see.

Marco Rubio sanctions four more International Criminal Court officials
Marco Rubio sanctions four more International Criminal Court officials

UPI

time21 minutes ago

  • UPI

Marco Rubio sanctions four more International Criminal Court officials

Four International Criminal Court officials are subject to U.S. sanctions announced on Wednesday, raising to eight the number of ICC officials who are subject to U.S. sanctions for violating national sovereignty and other alleged offenses. File Photo by Robin Utrecht/EPA-EFE Aug. 20 (UPI) -- U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has sanctioned four more members of the International Criminal Court for attempts to investigate, arrest, detain or prosecute individuals in non-member states. ICC Judges Kimberly Prost of Canada and Nicolas Guillou or France and deputy prosecutors Nazhat Shameem Khan of Fiji and Mame Mandiaye Niang of Senegal are subject to U.S. sanctions, Rubio announced in a State Department release on Wednesday. "The United States has been clear and steadfast in our opposition to the ICC's politicization, abuse of power, disregard for our national sovereignty and illegitimate judicial overreach," Rubio said. "The court is a national security threat that has been an instrument of lawfare against the United States and our close ally Israel." Prost is sanctioned for authorizing an ICC investigation of U.S. personnel in Afghanistan, while Guillou is sanctioned for authorizing the ICC's issuance of arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. Khan and Niang are sanctioned for continuing to support "illegitimate ICC actions" targeting Netanyahu and Gallant since each assumed leadership of the ICC's Office of the Prosecutor. The sanctions of the four individuals mean all of their property and interests in property that are located in the United States or under the control of U.S. persons are blocked and must be reported to the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control. The sanctions also block all entities that the individuals either directly or indirectly own or in which they have at least a 50% interest. Individuals and entities are prohibited from contributing funds, goods or services to the four ICC officials or receiving the same from them. The ICC rejected the sanctions in an online statement on Wednesday. "These sanctions are a flagrant attack against the independence of an impartial judicial institution which operates under the mandate from 125 states parties from all regions," ICC spokesperson Fadi El Abdallah said. "The ICC will continue fulfilling its mandates, undeterred, in strict accordance with its legal framework as adopted by the states parties without regard to any restriction, pressure or threat," El Abdallah said. The United States in June also sanctioned ICC Judges Solomy Balungi Bossa of Uganda, Luz del Carmen Ibanez Carranza of Peru and Beti Hohler of Slovenia, plus ICC Second Vice-President Reine Adelaide Sophie Alapini Gansou of Benin. Neither the United States nor Israel is part of the 125-member ICC, which was established in Rome in 2002, following the adoption of the Rome Statute in 1998 by the ICC's member states. The ICC is comprised of 33 African, 28 Latin American and Caribbean, 20 Eastern European, 19 Asia-Pacific and 25 Western European and other states. U.S. neighbors Canada and Mexico are among the ICC's member states.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store