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What would it take to end homelessness in California?

Before the pandemic, around 160,000 Californians were homeless on any given night—accounting for more than a quarter of the nation’s homeless population. The number is likely higher now, and one report projects that COVID-19-related job losses could cause chronic homelessness to jump by 68% in the state in the next four years. But a new road map argues that it’s possible to move aggressively in the other direction—and outlines exactly what could happen to end homelessness in California over the next decade.

“For several years now, we have recognized that housing policy has been really developed in a reactive way and a very piecemeal way, with short-term solutions for a long-term problem,” says Lisa Hershey, executive director of Housing California, a nonprofit that partnered with the California Housing Partnership and hundreds of other stakeholders to create the new report, called Roadmap Home 2030. “We recognized the need for a long-term vision, really clear, audacious goals, and a road map to get us there.”…

…Implementing the total suite of policies would cost the state around $17.9 billion a year, a comparable amount to what California spends on higher education. (Not ending homelessness is also expensive for the government; permanent supportive housing actually can cost less than what taxpayers spend on hospitalizations, jail time, and other costs for people experiencing chronic homelessness.) The plan suggests making billionaires pay more in taxes, ending corporate tax loopholes, and other tax changes to help pay for programs at the scale needed to actually solve the problem. Of course, all of this will be politically challenging to pull off. The groups that created the report are advocating for it now with legislators. “What’s most important is that everyone gets behind the idea that California, for the first time, has to have a long-term, comprehensive plan with clear goals of ending homelessness and housing low-income people who are extremely cost-burdened and at risk of becoming homeless,” says Matt Schwartz, president and CEO of the California Housing Partnership. “And that it needs to be comprehensive and implemented over a series of years and not reactive.”…