FEMA puts California on the hook for $300 million in pandemic homelessness costs

California officials say the federal government is reneging on hundreds of millions of dollars that cities and counties were counting on to help repay the cost of sheltering thousands of homeless people in hotel rooms during the pandemic.

Local governments across the state and Bay Area are now left scrambling to make up the funding gap at a time when their budgets are already stretched thin.

“We did our part and now the federal government must make good on their promises,” said Susan Ellenberg, president of the Board of Supervisors in Santa Clara County, which could be on the hook for $16 million. “This bait and switch tactic is indefensible.”

In an October letter to the state officials, the Federal Emergency Management Agency explained it would only reimburse hotel stays of up to 20 days between June 11, 2021, and May 11, 2023. Leased rooms that were empty also won’t be covered. That means cities and counties could stand to lose more than $300 million, according to the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services.

The news organization CalMatters first reported the letter and dollar figure.

Santa Clara County, which is staring down a $250 million budget shortfall, has submitted nearly $500 million to FEMA but has so far only been reimbursed about $50 million, officials said.

“We incurred those costs in the reliance on the federal government’s guarantee that it was going to pick up those costs,” said County Executive James R. Williams in a public meeting last week.

Gov. Gavin Newsom launched the hotel program, dubbed Project Roomkey, at the start of the pandemic in April 2020 to move the state’s most at-risk homeless people out of crowded encampments and group shelters where the virus could quickly spread. Officials credited the now-expired program with keeping unhoused residents safe, but the majority of the roughly 62,000 people who stayed at the hotel rooms failed to find permanent housing.

In FEMA’s letter, the agency said it decided to limit reimbursements to 20 days between June 11, 2021, when the state lifted its stay-at-home order, and May 11, 2023, when the federal pandemic emergency declaration ended, to align with the recommended quarantine period as COVID-19 transmission was declining. Many homeless people stayed far longer than 20 days.

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