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California's Housing Crisis Just Got a Major Glow-Up: Newsom's Bold Move to Crush Homelessness

a homeless man sleeping on a city street

Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

Hey Bay Area fam, get ready for some serious government shake-up that might actually make a difference in our housing nightmare. Governor Gavin Newsom just dropped a policy bomb that could totally transform how California tackles homelessness and housing affordability.

In a move that screams “we’re not messing around anymore,” Newsom is creating two brand new state agencies: the California Housing and Homelessness Agency (CHHA) and the Business and Consumer Services Agency (BCSA). Think of it like a bureaucratic superhero team dedicated to solving some of our state’s most stubborn problems.

Breaking Down the Government Remix

The CHHA is going to be laser-focused on housing, homelessness, and civil rights. We’re talking a coordinated effort to actually make meaningful progress on getting people off the streets and into stable housing. With departments like the Housing Development and Finance Committee and the California Housing Finance Agency under its umbrella, this isn’t just another paper-pushing operation.

Numbers That Actually Matter

Here’s the tea: while homelessness has been skyrocketing nationally, California has managed to keep its increase to just 3% - which might not sound impressive, but compared to other states, we’re basically winning. We’ve also scored the nation’s biggest reduction in veteran homelessness, which is honestly something to be proud of.

The Big Picture

Newsom’s not just shuffling departments - he’s institutionalizing housing and homelessness as long-term priorities. By creating dedicated agencies, he’s signaling that these aren’t just temporary problems we can ignore. The goal? Build 2.5 million new homes by 2030, with one million of those being affordable housing.

So yeah, Bay Area, something might actually be changing in our housing landscape. Stay tuned.

AUTHOR: mp

SOURCE: gov.ca.gov