MILESTONE: Over 500 Housed in Just 5 Months Through Operation Shelter to Home
Hundreds More Homeless Individuals on Path to Housing
Wednesday, September 9, 2020 - NEWS RELEASE
San Diego – In just five months since opening as an emergency shelter during the COVID-19 pandemic, Operation Shelter to Home at the San Diego Convention Center has hit another milestone by helping more than 525 individuals in the City’s shelter system experiencing homelessness find housing, with hundreds more on the path to a home after being matched with housing vouchers or subsidies.
The collaborative effort between the City of San Diego, County of San Diego, San Diego Housing Commission (SDHC), Regional Task Force on the Homeless (RTFH), San Diego Convention Center and homeless service providers opened on April 1 with two main objectives: protect the health of San Diegans experiencing homelessness amid the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic and work to house them as quickly as possible.
“San Diego is housing people at twice the rate we did before the pandemic, a remarkable feat and proof that we are going to keep our promise to come out of this crisis with fewer people living on our streets,” said Mayor Kevin L. Faulconer. “Hundreds of people are safer, healthier and happier thanks to the dedicated staff who have transformed the Convention Center into a beacon of hope. The streamlining and advancements San Diego has forged during these trying times will bring lasting improvements to our homeless service system.”
In July, the City and SDHC reported having housed more than 300 clients of Operation Shelter to Home. A combination of new housing strategies plus the opening of two large housing developments has set the operation on track to house an estimated 700 individuals by the end of September.
“Regional coordination, paired with the proper utilization of city assets, has ensured the safety of thousands of unsheltered San Diegans throughout the region during this ongoing pandemic,” said Councilmember Chris Ward, Chair of the Regional Task Force on the Homeless. “The success of Operation Shelter to Home reinforces the need to construct and provide permanent housing units to San Diegan’s struggling with chronic homelessness. The only way to truly resolve an individual’s homelessness is to house them. I look forward to our region’s continued work to serve our most vulnerable populations.”
The progress is the result of SDHC’s Housing Navigation Teams, working in partnership with RTFH staff, to identify gaps in the region’s Coordinated Entry System (CES) that match people to a housing voucher or subsidy. The agencies have also reduced barriers for access to various voucher and subsidy programs through the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, San Diego County’s Project One for All initiative and more.
“During challenging times, more than 500 individuals who experienced homelessness now have homes of their own. This is great news for them and for all of San Diego. The results demonstrate the positive impact of commitment, collaboration and coordination among all of the agencies and service providers involved with Operation Shelter to Home,” SDHC President & CEO Richard C. Gentry said.
This work by the SDHC and RTFH has more than doubled housing navigation placements compared to a 12-month period of the City’s Bridge Shelters, rectifying system barriers and challenges that would have not been achieved by the region’s service provider’s alone.
Operation Shelter to Home has housed individuals in the following locations:
- Permanent Support Housing – 43 percent
- Other longer-term housing (transitional housing, safe haven, host homes, foster care, substance abuse treatment facility, long-term care facility or nursing home) – 13 percent
- Friends and family – 17 percent
- Rapid Rehousing – 15 percent
- Rental (no subsidy or other subsidy) – 12 percent
The City and SDHC are working to purchase and transform hotels into permanent supportive housing units with on-site behavioral and mental health support. In recent weeks, the State of California reserved $27.7 million from its Project Homekey grant initiative for the purchase of the hotels and the County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to allocate $5.4 million for on-site services. Acquiring hotels is anticipated to make 300-400 housing units available in the near future.
The consolidation of resources at the convention center created more shelter space, allowed more room between individuals per guidelines from public health officials, and centralized staff across all agencies. The shelter currently serves more than 1,100 individuals daily.
The shelter continues to successfully protect the health of San Diegans experiencing homelessness. Due to intensive sanitation and safety efforts, only 20 clients and staff have tested positive for COVID-19 out of more than 7,000 tests conducted.
San Diego was the only major counties in California that saw a reduction in homelessness in 2019 and then continued that progress with an additional 6 percent reduction in the 2020 Point-In-Time Count.