$2 billion a year to solve homelessness? That’s what California mayors now say they need
A sign that reads "curbside urban oasis" welcomes people walking on Alhambra Boulevard under the Highway 99 underpass on Oct. 5, 2022. - Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee/TNS

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — How much money will it take to get enough unhoused residents into stable housing before Californians start seeing a visible improvement in the state’s intractable homeless crisis? More than a dozen mayors from California’s largest cities came to Sacramento Wednesday with their answer. They told Gov. Gavin Newsom it will take $2 billion in annual, ongoing funding to ease homelessness on their streets. The ask is $1 billion less than the lobbying group League of California Cities called for last week. It is double the $1 billion in one-time funding currently proposed by the ...