Governor Tina Kotek Announces Details of Urgent $130 Million Budget Package to Reduce Unsheltered Homelessness in 2023 Through the Redistribution of Wealth
PRESS RELEASE
January 26, 2023
CONTACT
Elisabeth Shepard, Press Secretary
Elisabeth.Shepard@Oregon.Gov
Governor Tina Kotek Announces Details of Urgent $130 Million Budget Package to Reduce Unsheltered Homelessness in 2023
(Salem, OR) — Today, Governor Tina Kotek announced details of her urgent request to state lawmakers to invest $130 million toward reducing the number of unsheltered Oregonians in 2023. Currently, there are approximately 18,000 Oregonians experiencing homelessness in Oregon, and approximately 11,000 of those households are unsheltered. This request was paired with a statewide emergency order declaring a Homelessness State of Emergency, signed on January 10, the Governor’s first full day in office.
This spending package will aim to provide immediate relief to at least 1,200 unsheltered Oregonians, prevent nearly 9,000 households from becoming homeless, expand the state’s shelter capacity by 600 new beds, increase sanitation services, and ensure a coordinated, equitable response to the homelessness emergency.
The package will invest in both statewide strategies as well as focused investments to reduce unsheltered homelessness in emergency areas. The Governor has had preliminary conversations with legislative leaders and looks forward to working with them to finalize the package. Her initial proposal includes the following elements:
Prevent vulnerable households from becoming homeless
$33.6 million to prevent 8,750 households from becoming homeless by funding rent assistance and other eviction prevention services.
Add shelter beds and housing navigators
$23.8 million to add 600 low-barrier shelter beds statewide and hire more housing navigators to ensure unsheltered Oregonians can get connected to the shelter and services they need.
Rehouse unsheltered households
$54.4 million to rehouse at least 1,200 unsheltered households by funding prepaid rental assistance, block leasing at least 600 vacant homes, landlord guarantees and incentives, and other re-housing services.
Support Oregon Tribes
$5 million to support emergency response directly to the nine sovereign tribes in the State of Oregon.
Ensure equitable outcomes
$5 million to increase capacity for culturally responsive organizations to support equitable outcomes of the homelessness state of emergency.
Support local sanitation services
$2 million to support local communities for sanitation services.
Coordinate emergency response
$1.8 million to support the emergency response being coordinated by the Office of Emergency Management and Oregon Housing and Community Services.
These urgent investments will address the homelessness emergency facing communities across Oregon today, but it is only one piece of the larger strategy required to address this humanitarian crisis. The Governor’s recommended budget builds on these targeted investments to ensure we are reducing homelessness and providing resources to address this issue in every corner of the state. Oregon must simultaneously address its lack of affordable housing. That will take local, state, federal, nonprofit, and private sectors working together to make progress towards an ambitious statewide housing production target of 36,000 homes per year—an 80 percent increase over recent construction trends.
“I am urging the legislature to take up this investment package as quickly as possible. Unsheltered Oregonians need relief now, and our local communities need the support to provide that relief. This is only the first step. Together, we can act with the urgency people across our state are demanding. Bold ideas, concrete solutions, disciplined follow through. That’s how we can deliver results, this year, and in the years to follow,” Governor Tina Kotek stated.
###
Related Posts:
Governor Kate Brown Commutes Oregon’s Death Row — Rob Taylor Report
Governor Kate Brown Grants Pardon for Oregon Marijuana Offenses — Rob Taylor Report
Public invited to comment on a federal grant award in Coos Bay — Rob Taylor Report
Coos County Press Release - Property Taxes — Rob Taylor Report
Closure of the Coos County Forest to ALL Entry!!! — Rob Taylor Report
South Slough Reserve Seeks Member of Public to Serve on Management Commission — Rob Taylor Report
Plan Taking Shape to Remove Abandoned and Derelict Vessels from Oregon Waterways — Rob Taylor Report
State Land Board To Meet August 09, 2022, at South Slough Reserve in Coos County — Rob Taylor Report
Jordan Cove Withdraws Removal-Fill Permit Application — Rob Taylor Report
DSL ~ South Slough Reserve Public Comment Open On Commercial Guide Rules — Rob Taylor Report