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California Fails To Track How Billions Are Spent To Fight Homelessness
California Fails To Track How Billions Are Spent To Fight Homelessness
California has failed to consistently track the ongoing costs and outcomes of its homelessness
services despite spending billions of dollars over the past five years to combat the crisis, a
new state audit report found.
Homelessness in America reached a record high last year, according to federal data, which
recorded over 650,000 people experiencing homelessness on a given night in 2023. Of those
hundreds of thousands, California accounted for 28% of the nation's unhoused population.
An estimated 181,399 people — with 68% unsheltered — are homeless in California, the U.S.
Department of Urban Planning and Development reported last December. That number
marks a 53% increase from 2013, according to the California auditor’s report released on
Tuesday.
To address the crisis, the state allocated nearly $24 billion over the past five years to fund at
least 30 homeless and housing programs during the last five fiscal years (2018-2023). But the
state has not collected sufficient data to determine whether the programs have been effective,
the report says.
The report cast some blame at the California Interagency Council on Homelessness, an 18-
member council that oversees the state's "Housing First" model and regulations to "reduce
the prevalence and duration of homelessness in California," according to
its mission statement.
The audit found that the council has not tracked and evaluated state programs since June
2021. It also noted that currently there is no reliable system to gather information on the
costs and results of the programs.
"In general, this report concludes that the State must do more to assess the cost-effectiveness
of its homelessness programs," California State Auditor Grant Parks wrote in a letter to Gov.
Gavin Newsom and lawmakers.
Since 2020, Homekey has received about 3.6 billion in funding to convert hotel and motel
rooms into housing for people experiencing homelessness, according to the audit. The
average costs of converting a room was "significantly lower than the costs of building other
affordable housing," in the state, the report says.
CalWORKs Housing Support Program received about $760 million over the past five fiscal
years and spent an average of $12,000 to $22,000 per fiscal year on families that received
housing support through the program, according to the report. Studies have shown that
states can spend as much as $30,000 to $50,000 per year on a single person experiencing
homelessness, the report noted.
But the audit found that the three other programs, which received more than $9.4 billion in
funding since 2020, couldn't be fully evaluated due to lack of data. "In the absence of this
information, the State cannot determine whether these programs represent the best use of its
funds," the report reads.
Democratic California state Sen. Dave Cortese had requested the audit after touring an
encampment in San Jose in 2022. In a statement Tuesday, Cortese called for improved data
and greater transparency at both the state and local levels.
Republican California state Assemblymember Josh Hoover, who co-authored the request for
the audit, said in a statement Tuesday that the audit was a "critical first step" in addressing
the state's crisis.
"(California) has failed to solve its homelessness crisis and it doesn’t even know where the
dollars are going. Without more transparency, we won’t see any accountability," Hoover said
on X, formerly Twitter.
Prop. 1 had passed by less than half a percent of the vote and will allocate about $6.4 billion
to build mental health treatment facilities and housing. It will also provide rental assistance
for the unhoused who are chronically homeless and have mental health or addiction issues.
Funding will be used to add 11,150 new treatment beds and supportive housing units and
over 26,00 outpatient spots, according to the governor's website. The bond includes $1
billion set aside specifically for veterans’ housing.
While the measure is not expected to significantly change the number of unhoused people in
California, it received bipartisan support to boost funding for housing and mental health.
Contributing: Claire Thornton, Terry Collins, and Kathryn Palmer, USA TODAY