Laserfiche WebLink
Attachment 1 <br /> RESOLUTION NO. 22- <br /> A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PLEASANTON <br /> ENDORSING THE ALAMEDA COUNTY HOME TOGETHER 2026 IMPLEMENTATION <br /> PLAN TO ADDRESS HOMELESSNESS <br /> WHEREAS, the Home Together 2026 Implementation Plan (Home Together 2026) is a <br /> community-wide plan for Alameda County which lays out the goals, strategies, and investments <br /> needed to dramatically reduce homelessness by 2026 and reverse racial disparities in <br /> homelessness through fully centering equity; and <br /> WHEREAS, on any given night over 8,000 people experience homelessness in Alameda <br /> County, a number that grows to approximately 15,000 people over the course of a year; and <br /> WHEREAS, more than 90% of the households in Alameda County are adults without <br /> children, including nearly 10% who are between the ages of 18 and 24; and <br /> WHEREAS, dramatic racial disparities exist in Alameda County as in the nation as a <br /> whole, and the homeless population does not reflect the demographics of the county; and <br /> WHEREAS, in Alameda County, African Americans experience homelessness at more <br /> than four times their representation in the population (47% vs. 11%); and <br /> WHEREAS, in Alameda County, Native Americans, multiracial people and Hawaiian <br /> Native/Pacific Islanders are all vastly overrepresented in homelessness, among those newly <br /> homeless and in the rates at which they return to homelessness even after getting into housing; <br /> and <br /> WHEREAS, Home Together 2026 builds and is informed by existing local and regional <br /> plans, including the 2020 Centering Racial Equity in Homeless System Design report (CRE), All <br /> Home Regional Action Plan, and Plan Bay Area 2050; and <br /> WHEREAS, Home Together 2026 is also responsive to requirements laid out in the <br /> California Comeback Plan necessary to receive critical State housing and health funding; and <br /> WHEREAS, the homeless system modeling conducted in 2019-20 and updated in 2021 <br /> points to significant gaps in the current system in terms of both housing resources and program <br /> types; and <br /> WHEREAS, only an estimated 36% of those experiencing homelessness can be <br /> supported by the current system's resources or are able to find housing or leave homelessness <br /> on their own; and <br /> WHEREAS, without significant effort and investment including prevention, shelter <br /> expansion, increasing housing solutions, and strengthening the system's overall capacity, <br /> homelessness in Alameda County will continue to grow; and <br /> WHEREAS, the total estimated cost of needed investments over the coming five years <br /> to fully meet the need is $2.5 billion, including approximately $430 million for additional shelter, <br /> $1.68 billion for permanent housing such as dedicated affordable housing and permanent <br /> supportive housing, and $388 million for prevention, rapid rehousing and shallow subsidies; and <br /> WHEREAS, additional funding will be needed for the one-time development costs for <br /> new buildings; and <br />