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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELESSNESS AND SUPPORTIVE HOUSING ANNOUNCES $31 MILLION IN COMPETITIVE CONTINUUM OF CARE PROGRAM AWARDS

*** PRESS RELEASE ***
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELESSNESS AND SUPPORTIVE HOUSING ANNOUNCES $31 MILLION IN COMPETITIVE CONTINUUM OF CARE PROGRAM AWARDS

 

Wednesday December 21, 2016
Contact: Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing: 415-554-7755

HUD FY 2016 Continuum of Care Program awards San Francisco Continuum of Care a record $31 million in grants, recognizing and investing in proven solutions to end homelessness. 

San Francisco, CA— Jeff Kositsky, Director of the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing (HSH) announced the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) FY 2016 Continuum of Care (CoC) competitive grant preliminary award of $31,804,009.28 for the San Francisco Continuum of Care, an increase of $723,709 over last year.  The FY 2016 award includes a non-renewable $918,933 planning grant.  HUD Continuum of Care funds will support 54 projects in San Francisco, including seven new projects; funds will primarily support permanent supportive housing and rapid rehousing efforts. In addition, one transitional housing project will be funded, as well as the City’s Coordinated Entry efforts and three HMIS projects.

“HUD’s Continuum of Care funding provides vital resources to a wide range of programs and projects that are effective in the fight to end homelessness in our community,” said Jeff Kositsky “the increased CoC funding for the San Francisco Continuum is a testament to the great work our City and nonprofit partners are engaged in.  We know what works to end homelessness and will continue to align resources and work together to develop a client-centric, data driven, twenty-first century system that gets people off the streets and into housing.”

This year’s CoC funding is the greatest amount San Francisco has ever received.  San Francisco has seen a 57% increase in HUD Continuum funding since 2011 when San Francisco received $20,180,001 in grant funds.  “I would like to join my colleagues on the LHCB and fellow residents in congratulating and thanking all providers and program raters who work very hard and collectively to help the most vulnerable among us,” said Del Seymour, co-chair of the Local Homeless Coordinating Board “As the Holidays near and people are traveling home it’s so important that we continue to ensure that a Home is provided for everyone. I’m elated that HUD is focusing more on the epidemic of youth homelessness.  I recently attended a homelessness summit in Washington DC and was proud to hear in many discussions that SF is the City that knows how to get it done.  So as we celebrate, don’t forget to look around our streets. We got much more work to do.”

New projects funded this year include $1,406,825 for permanent supportive housing for veterans and individuals and $886,189 for rapid rehousing projects for families and youth.

HUD’s Continuum of Care program is designed to promote communitywide commitment to ending homelessness; provide funding for efforts by nonprofit providers and State and local governments to quickly rehouse homeless individuals and families. “This is another critical investment in support of those working each and every day to house and serve our most vulnerable neighbors,” said HUD Secretary Julián Castro. “We know how to end homelessness and will continue to encourage our local partners to use the latest evidence to achieve success. These grants support proven strategies to end homelessness once and for all.”

Nationally, HUD awarded a record $1.95 billion in grants to nearly 7,600 homeless assistance programs.  California received the greatest Continuum of Care funding in the country.  In the state, San Francisco’s Continuum of Care funding ranks third, behind Los Angeles City and County CoC and Oakland, Berkeley/Alameda County CoC.

###

About the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing: The Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing (HSH) aims to make homelessness in San Francisco rare, brief and a one-time occurrence through the provision of coordinated, compassionate and high-quality services.  Established in 2016, HSH consolidates and coordinates citywide homeless serving programs and contracts.  For more information please visit: http://dhsh.sfgov.org

Mayor Lee Announces HandUp Gift Card Expansion to New Retail and Redemption Locations Throughout the City

 

*** PRESS RELEASE ***
MAYOR LEE ANNOUNCES HANDUP GIFT CARD EXPANSION TO NEW RETAIL AND REDEMPTION LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT THE CITY

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Monday, December 19, 2016
Contact: Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing: 415-554-7755
HandUp gift cards will be available for sale in retail locations throughout the City and redeemable by people in need of services at three new sites. 

San Francisco, CA— Mayor Edwin M. Lee and Jeff Kositsky, Director of the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing (HSH) announced the expansion of HandUp’s Gift Card program to retail locations throughout the City.  Additionally, HandUp Gift Cards will now be redeemable for services at three new resource centers in locations throughout the city.

“The HandUp gift cards are a great way to give and connect people to services and resources they need most,” said Mayor Lee. “With the holidays fast approaching, the Hand Up gift card expansion couldn’t have come at a better time.”

HandUp Gift Cards are physical cards with a $25 value that can be given directly to people experiencing homelessness and in-need who can redeem them at participating service providers for HandUp Gift Cards can be exchanged for a range of goods and services including retail and restaurant gift cards such as for Goodwill or Subway, or payment of other expenses like bus passes, or paying a cell phone bill.

Gift cards will be available for purchase online and at the Hall and Equator Coffee and Teas locations.  HandUp launched the Gift Card program in partnership with Project Homeless Connect and Glide.

“I started HandUp after passing a woman sleeping on the street and wanting to do more to help,” said Rose Broom, co-founder and CEO of HandUp “With HandUp Gift Cards you can give directly to a specific person experiencing homelessness in your community, and connect them with vital resources like food and clothing.”

Google.org has been a major HandUp partner and helped them be able to scale.  In addition Google.org and other companies have purchased gift cards in bulk for San Francisco based employees to give to people they see in need on the street.  “Since 2014, Google.org has given over $13M to Bay Area organizations innovating in their approach to combat homelessness,” said Justin Steele of Google.org. “HandUp was among Google.org’s first grantees in this work, and we are proud to have helped HandUp reach 46 local nonprofits and improve the lives of over 6,400 individuals experiencing homelessness and poverty.”

Partnerships with non-profit providers are key to what makes the HandUp gift cards effective.  Non-profit providers pair gift card donations with services.  “HandUp is an effective way to give and make real change in an individual’s life.  By donating through Hand Up gift cards, you are investing in your community.  You are saying all San Franciscans have value,” said Kara Zordel, Executive Director of Project Homeless Connect.  “Not only does your donation connect an individual to life changing resources, you connect them to a community non-profit.  This connectivity ensures each person receives individualized care so participants may obtain all of the resources they need to move forward.”

Through this expansion, gift cards will now also be redeemable at the Mission Neighborhood Resource Center, United Council of Neighborhood Services and MSC South.  Resource centers that partner with HandUp, accept the cards and exchange them for basic goods and services. Recipients are able to take care of their needs and also get connected with other resources.  “The gift card expansion will give us one more tool to help connect people to vital resources,” said Jeff Kositsky “Resource centers offer people on the streets both mundane services like showers and haircuts but also important service connections like housing and benefits assistance.”

“Right now is a time when communities need to come together more than ever to support our most vulnerable neighbors,” said Sammie Rayner, co-founder and COO of HandUp. “I recently gave a HandUp Gift Card to a young man who wanted money for work boots so he could get a construction job. After bringing his gift card to Project Homeless Connect, he was able to not only put the money toward his work boots, but also learn about other valuable resources the city has to offer.”

 

New Retail Partners

The Hall SF, 1028 Market Street

Equator Coffee and Teas, 986 Market Street

Equator Coffee and Teas, 222 2nd Street

New Redemption Centers

Mission Neighborhood Resource Center, 165 Capp Street

MSC South/St. Vincent de Paul, 525 5th Street

United Council of Neighborhood Services, 2111 Jennings

###

About the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing: The Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing (HSH) aims to make homelessness in San Francisco rare, brief and a one-time occurrence through the provision of coordinated, compassionate and high-quality services.  Established in 2016, HSH consolidates and coordinates citywide homeless serving programs and contracts.  For more information please visit: http://dhsh.sfgov.org

About Hand Up: HandUp helps you give directly to people experiencing homelessness and poverty in your community. Whether online at HandUp.org, or through HandUp Gift Cards that let you give to homeless neighbors on the street, give with HandUp to see the direct impact of your donations. To date HandUp has raised over $1.7 million for homelessness and poverty programs across more than 30 U.S. cities.  For more information please visit: http://handup.org

 

San Francisco Hosts 2nd Annual West Coast Mayors Summit

San Francisco Hosts 2nd Annual West Coast Mayors Summit

Monday, December 12, 2016

Mayors from nine cities convene in San Francisco for two day summit to discuss top priorities, homelessness and resiliency

 

Mayors of nine West Coast cities from California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington gathered for the 2nd annual West Coast Mayors Summit hosted by Mayor Edwin M. Lee to discuss the issues of homelessness and resiliency.

 

Portland Mayor Charlie Hales, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell, San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo, Sacramento Mayor-elect Darrell Steinberg, West Sacramento Mayor Christopher Cabaldon, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and San Francisco Mayor Lee participated in the discussions.

 

“Now more than ever it’s critical that leaders are united in tackling the issues we face in our urban cores,” said Mayor Lee. “By bringing together mayors from up and down the West Coast we can explore new innovative strategies, leverage our resources and make a powerful call for a renewed focus on homelessness and resiliency.”

 

The two day summit began with a focus on homelessness. The recently released 2016 Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress found that 549,928 people in the country experienced homelessness on a single night in 2016, a decline of 14 percent since 2010. Despite this national decrease, many West Coast cities have seen an increase in homelessness. The recent increases are related to the high cost of housing, low vacancy rates, and the opioid crisis.

 

“As Seattle and our fellow West Coast cities develop solutions to the homelessness crisis, we must focus on the individual needs of those living on our streets,” said Mayor Murray. “This means not simply addressing homelessness, but also its causes, from a lack of affordable housing to funding for mental health and substance abuse treatment. Homelessness is often the result of many other public policy and environmental failures and we must seek to address those if we are going to serve those in need.”

 

“Homelessness is not hopelessness in Sacramento or any other city in this country,” said Mayor-elect Steinberg. “It is first and foremost a humanitarian issue, weighing on our collective conscious and challenging our nation to be innovative, collaborative, and compassionate. As mayors from West Coast cities we clearly have a common agenda around homelessness. Especially in these times we must band together to tackle the issues and learn from each other.”

 

“All of the mayors participating in this summit have similar challenges with homelessness and have found a number of unique solutions,” said Mayor Kirk Caldwell. “As we deal with challenges at the federal level, these west coast cities and Honolulu are united to help our residents find permanent housing.”

 

The mayors, joined by United States Interagency Council on Homelessness Executive Director Matthew Doherty, discussed the challenges of preventing and ending homelessness in their communities and shared best-practices. Each mayor presented on recent successes in their cities’ fight to end homelessness. Presentations ranged from strategies to raise local resources, innovative ways to address street homelessness and encampments, and leveraging initiatives we know work to end veteran, youth and family homelessness.

 

“Portland, like many cities, is grappling with a crisis — more people are sleeping outside than we have housing available,” said Mayor Charlie Hales. “The crisis has also brought the opportunity for innovative solutions through new partnerships. I’m proud that Portland is the first West Coast city to receive official designation in meeting the White House’s Mayors Challenge to End Veterans Homelessness. This achievement would not have been possible without the dedication of federal resources in our community. In order to sustain the incredible progress we’ve made, we need continued support from the federal government to ensure everyone has a safe and affordable place to call home.”

 

“Every major U.S. city is grappling with a growing homelessness crisis,” said Mayor Sam Liccardo. “Here in San Jose, we’ve employed innovative strategies to increase the supply of housing for our most vulnerable residents and led a community-wide campaign that is more than half way to our goal to end veteran homelessness in Santa Clara County. However, building upon this success will require a commitment from the federal government to continue investing in and supporting cities’ efforts to advance proven and cost-effective housing-first solutions.”

 

“In cities across our nation, we are faced with increasing homelessness and income insecurity brought on by a growing affordability crisis,” said Mayor Libby Schaaf. “We need room for innovation, coordination across jurisdictional and agency lines, and every tool available to help foster resiliency in our cities in order to address these chronic issues. In Oakland we have a pilot to support homeless residents living in encampments that also improves quality of life for nearby residents as we work to move people into permanent housing.”

 

“In Los Angeles, we continue pushing forward with creative solutions that include investing every City dollar available, leveraging existing resources and approving LA’s largest homelessness housing bond to invest $1.2 billion into the construction of homeless housing over the next decade,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti. Our efforts have helped house more than 21,000 Angelenos, but with thousands more still sleeping on our streets every night, we must do more. We need to build on our momentum and take successful efforts to scale. As neighboring Mayors, we have to join our voices and point them towards Washington to ensure our cities get the funding and support they need to tackle this crisis.”

 

The mayors, speaking in one voice, called for leadership from Washington; citing a long history of bipartisan support, across administrations, for ending homelessness. The federal government, together with states, counties, and cities, has the responsibility to ensure access to affordable, quality housing for homeless residents in need of support. Housing provides the base for personal wellbeing, community stability, and economic growth.

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