The state nearly doubled its prior proposal to fund a program that city leaders have called “the backbone of the state’s local homelessness response system.”
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California, home to the nation’s largest unhoused population, has recorded declines in homelessness in recent years, including a 2.8% drop in 2025.
However, dissatisfied with local government progress on homeless encampments and facing budgetary pressures, Gov. Gavin Newsom halted a seventh round of funding for HHAP last year. “I’m not interested in funding failure anymore,” Newsom said at the time.
City leaders balked, warning cuts would come at the cost of shelter beds and progress in addressing homelessness in cities and counties. The HHAP program launched in 2019 and has allocated around $5 billion to localities through a number of annual funding rounds, most of them exceeding $800 million.
The League of California Cities celebrated the restored seventh round of funding, calling HHAP “the backbone of the state’s local homelessness response system.”
Riverside, California, has added more than 130 shelter beds, 100 permanent housing units and ended youth homelessness due in part to the program, according to Mayor Patricia Lock Dawson, chair of the California Big City Mayors Coalition that advocated for the renewed funding stream.
“With new funding on the way, we’ll continue to expand outreach, support those at risk of homelessness, and connect more people to housing and stability,” Lock Dawson said on social media.