Homelessness can’t be cut big-time? Don’t tell Sacramento.

A homeless encampment of tents neatly sit underneath the I-5 freeway in Sacramento, California, in 2022.

A homeless encampment of tents neatly sit underneath the I-5 freeway in Sacramento, California, in 2022. Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images

 

Connecting state and local government leaders

COMMENTARY | Since 2022, overall homelessness in the city and county has decreased by more than a quarter. Officials credit intergovernmental collaboration and commitment.

Most mayors’ stump speeches and policy platforms include a pledge to build more affordable housing and reduce the number of the unhoused. But aligning the services, constituencies and resources is a seemingly intractable challenge with few hopeful results.

In Sacramento, California, however, the latest point-in-time survey of those in shelters and on the street, conducted in January, tells the story of a dramatic reduction in the number of unhoused residents in the city and county: Since 2022, overall homelessness has decreased by 29% and the number of people sleeping outdoors has fallen by 41%.

“There’s a lot of political posturing around homelessness, but in the end it’s the old-fashioned work that matters,” Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg told me. “When I started as mayor, we were funding and operating less than 100 beds a night. We now operate 1,350 beds a night. Between the city and county, we’ve gotten 25,000-plus people off the streets since 2017, from unsheltered status to housed. We’ve made a commitment.”

Collaboration and commitment are what worked in this city and county of more than 2 million residents. Under a 2022 agreement, the two formed a new partnership with nonprofit groups to implement a strategic plan that combines building housing capacity with an aggressive outreach to people in need.

“It’s a dual strategy,” Steinberg said. “We now have a legally binding partnership agreement with our county where nothing is perfect but we’re working better together than ever before. Combine that with enforcing our critical infrastructure, sidewalk and private property laws.”

Under the agreement, city and county officials promised to take on shared and individual jurisdiction responsibilities. Both entities agreed to create 10 new encampment engagement teams, staffed by the city and county, to provide intensive outreach, assessment, navigation, service delivery and housing to as many people as possible. They also pledged to focus efforts to provide services and housing through a coordinated access system—a centralized access point designed to coordinate program participant intake, assessments and referrals to housing—to streamline city and county outreach.

Individually, the city of Sacramento said it would:

  • Dispatch the engagement teams with immediate offers for city services—everything from solid-waste removal to code enforcement to public safety protocols.

  • Identify locations for safe parking, shelters, motel conversions and permanent supportive housing.

  • Designate funding for continued investment in temporary and permanent housing with innovative partnerships and resources, such as the city’s Housing Trust Fund.

Sacramento County, meanwhile, agreed to:

  • Embed county mental health staff with the engagement teams to provide on-the-spot behavioral assessments and help get people into the appropriate mental health or substance abuse treatment programs.

  • Write and enforce “5150 holds,” which under state law allow judges to involuntarily commit people experiencing a crisis to outpatient drug and mental health treatment.

  • Build and fund new Community Outreach Recovery Empowerment behavioral health centers within the city limits.

  • Commit to creating 200 new shelter beds within a year and 200 more within three years.

In addition to collaboration, caring for Sacramento’s unhoused has also required a commitment of significant financial resources. Since 2019, the city and county have taken in approximately $120 million in state Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention grants. Nearly 97% of that money has gone to support emergency beds for the homeless. The city and county have increased the number of emergency beds by 84%, while the number of individuals now in permanent housing has increased by 30%.

It’s still early in the partnership, but the returns are more than just promising. The January 2024 point-in-time count found that the number of people without housing had fallen to 3,944, down from 6,664 two years previously. Overall, the number living either without shelter or living in shelters or temporary housing fell from 9,278 to 6,615.

Local officials aren’t quite ready to take a victory lap. Steinberg points out that it’s not enough to get people off the street. It’s essential, he said, to help prevent people from losing their homes in the first place.

“It not only needs to be sustainable, it needs to get even better, because there are still too many people on the streets,” Steinberg said. “And it’s going to take even greater collaboration, even more resources, even greater commitment.”

Not everyone is sold on the results reported by the city and county. “These numbers are incredibly difficult to believe and further highlight the trust issues with local government that our guests have consistently expressed over our many years of service,” the nonprofit group Loaves and Fishes, one of the region’s largest nonprofit homeless services providers, told the Los Angeles Times in a statement. “All campus programs have reported serving more guests daily than last year.”

Loaves and Fishes said it saw a 6.4% increase in the number of homeless people seeking services from 2022 to 2023, including a 21% increase in meals served, and the organization’s director said she expected the numbers to grow through this year.

Steinberg praised Loaves and Fishes for its “long and storied history of helping unsheltered people,” but he defended the numbers reported from the point-in-time survey. “No one questioned the methodology when the numbers went up.”

What can’t be dismissed is the effort behind the numbers. It’s taken millions of dollars along with a firm, long-standing commitment from city and county leaders and workers, nonprofit groups and just about everyone in the community. But there’s still much more to do, as Steinberg himself acknowledges.

Other local governments can take a close look at Sacramento’s bold experiment and try their own versions of collaboration. By forging partnerships across jurisdictional boundaries, harnessing and aligning efforts, and committing the necessary resources from government, nonprofits and other partners, cities and counties across America may find room to innovate and reduce the human suffering associated with the lack of safe and affordable housing.

Mark Funkhouser, president of Funkhouser & Associates, is a municipal finance expert who has spent decades in government service and is a former mayor of Kansas City. He is an advisor to Route Fifty.

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