04/08/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/08/2026 10:49
What you need to know: After the first drop in statewide unsheltered homelessness in 15 years, Governor Newsom continues to advance effective programs to help local communities reduce homelessness. Eight regions throughout the state received $145.4 million in state support to get people off the streets and into housing and services.
SACRAMENTO - Building on California's 9% reduction in unsheltered homelessness in 2025, and the first drop in homelessness in 15 years, Governor Gavin Newsom today continued state support for local communities with $145.4 million in Homelessness Housing, Assistance and Prevention (HHAP) program funding to prevent and address homelessness.
Eight communities, including the Lake, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, Santa Clara, Solano, Yolo and Yuba regions will receive funding to get people experiencing homelessness off the street and into supportive services and interim and permanent housing. The HHAP program has already transitioned more than 100,000 Californians from homelessness into permanent stable housing and accelerated local interventions
We're making critical investments through programs to help local communities expand housing, strengthen services, and better support people experiencing homelessness. But just investing money is not enough - we have to invest in programs and local governments that are producing real results.
Governor Gavin Newsom
HHAP is a multi-year grant program that helps local communities prevent and end homelessness through targeted housing solutions. Eligible recipients include 58 counties, 14 large cities with populations over 300,000, and 44 Continuums of Care (CoCs). In partnership with the Legislature, the Newsom Administration has made historic investments in the program, with nearly $5 billion appropriated through current and prior HHAP rounds to support local jurisdictions in promoting housing stability and reducing homelessness. Earlier this year, $419 million was awarded to the Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco regions in the first HHAP Round 6 funding announcement. Another $159.3 million was later awarded to 20 California regions. In the eight communities awarded today, 80% of HHAP budgets is dedicated to permanent and interim housing.
Governor Newsom has called to ensure funding has the greatest impact for people experiencing homelessness. Today's Round 6 awards underwent a rigorous review by the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), where awardees had to demonstrate state funding will make an impact on reducing homelessness. Additional measures include requirements that grantees have and maintain a compliant housing element and mechanisms to claw back HHAP 6 funding from grantees that fail to demonstrate progress. Californians can visit www.accountablity.ca.gov for more information about how your community is performing in addressing housing, homelessness, and mental health care.
There is a seventh round of HHAP totaling $500 million planned for the coming budget year. HHAP Round 7 will expand existing accountability metrics to ensure grantees continue to make meaningful investments in housing solutions and adopt policies that will increase local housing supply.
"HHAP grants are a testament to California's commitment to driving real results through responsible, outcome-focused leadership in partnership with local regions," said Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency Secretary Tomiquia Moss. "By investing in proven, collaborative solutions that prevent and address homelessness, we are strengthening local systems, expanding access to stable housing, and ensuring our communities can deliver meaningful support to the Californians who need it most."
Today's investments into homelessness prevention:
Today's announcement builds off of the Newsom Administration's historic investments in regional solutions to prevent and address homelessness through multiple rounds of HHAP. With the awards announced today, 31 of 42 regional applications submitted for HHAP Round 6 have been granted more than $724.3 million.
Governor Newsom is the first Governor in state history to make addressing the housing and homelessness crises a statewide priority. Creating affordable housing for Californians and ensuring that every community follows state housing laws are key components in meeting this goal. Governor Newsom is creating a structural and foundational model for America:
✅ Streamlining and prioritizing building of new housing - Governor Newsom made creating more housing a state priority for the first time in history. He has signed into law groundbreaking reforms to break down systemic barriers that have stood in the way of building the housing Californians need, including broad CEQA reforms.
✅ Creating shelter and support - Providing funding and programs for local governments, coupled with strong accountability measures to ensure that each local government is doing its share to build housing, and create shelter and support, so that people living in encampments have a safe place to go. Recently, the Jordan Down Project in Los Angeles, through a $77 million investment from California's cap and invest program became the largest public housing project in the region.
✅ Addressing mental health and its impact on homelessness - Ending a long-standing behavioral health bed shortfall in California by rapidly expanding community treatment centers and permanent supportive housing units. In 2024, voters approved Governor Newsom's Proposition 1 which is transforming California's behavioral health systems - delivering more than the promised 6,800 residential treatment beds (6,919) and 26,700 outpatient treatment slots (27,561) for behavioral health care to date.
✅ Creating new pathways for those who need the most help - Updating conservatorship laws for the first time in 50 years to include people who are unable to provide for their personal safety or necessary medical care, in addition to food, clothing, or shelter, due to either severe substance use disorder or serious mental health illness. Creating a new CARE court system that creates court-administered plans for up to 24 months for people struggling with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, often with substance use challenges.
✅ Removing dangerous encampments - Governor Newsom has set a strong expectation for all local governments to address encampments in their communities and help connect people with support. In 2024, Governor Newsom filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court defending communities' authority to clear encampments. After the Supreme Court affirmed local authority, Governor Newsom issued an executive order directing state entities and urging local governments to clear encampments and connect people with support, using a state-tested model that helps ensure encampments are addressed humanely and people are given adequate notice and support.
In 2025, just a year after he issued an executive order urging local governments to better address encampments, the Governor announced his State Action for Facilitation on Encampments (SAFE) Task Force to address encampments in California's ten largest cities. The task force has addressed encampments in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Sacramento, and Fresno - connecting dozens of people with shelter. Since 2021, Caltrans has removed more than 20,600 encampments on state right-of-way, offered services to nearly 62,000 people, and collected approximately 3.4 million cubic yards of litter and debris.