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Newsom Lays Homeless Blame on Local Governments by Call for Ordinance Banning Encampments, Says HHR

Housing advocates from AHF’s Housing Is A Human Right (HHR) division and National Coalition for the Homeless blasted California Governor Gavin Newsom for his call earlier today on cities and towns across the state to ban homeless encampments—criminalizing many of their unhoused occupants in the process.

After two terms in office and despite allocating $24 billion in state funding to address the homeless crisis, Governor Newsom has little to nothing to show that he has meaningfully addressed homelessness in California. Worse, state officials under his watch cannot even account for how the $24 billion may have been spent.

Newsom may feel empowered by last year’s disastrous Supreme Court ruling in the Grants Pass case, which now allows for the criminalization of homeless communities living on our streets nationwide.

“Governor Newsom signed housing legislation with no mandate for low-income affordable housing, opposed rent control and cozied up to market-rate developers, all of which increased homelessness, and now he wants to lay all the blame on local government,” stated Susie Shannon, Policy Director for Housing is a Human Right. “It is unconscionable to take away the right of people to sit, lay or sleep on public property in California when there are approximately 187,000 people homeless and nowhere for them to live. How many housing bills will Newsom sign this year alone that provide no relief for high rents for working families, children and seniors and no housing for those experiencing homelessness?”

"The solution requires addressing the structural issues. Without having housing in place along with supportive services, this is going in the wrong direction,” added Donald Whitehead, Executive Director, National Coalition for the Homeless. “It only exacerbates homelessness and while we are not promoting encampments, we understand that this is a symptom of California not addressing the structural cause of homelessness, which is a lack of housing for people who are marginalized.”

Contacts

Press Contact:

Ged Kenslea, AHF Senior Director of Communications

323.791.5526

ged.kenslea@ahf.org