Neighborhood safety, home value, drug use, and density concerns met local leaders on Jan. 25 as they introduced Santa Maria residents to a new proposal to put an interim housing facility near the Betteravia Government Center.Ā

At the community meeting, one neighbor shared worries about loitering in nearby parks, neighborhoods, and shopping centers.
āThe people we deal with as a local neighborhood, personally Iāve met some of them by name. I donāt envision them being in this program because they donāt want to be in this program because of the rules and regulations within the walls,ā the neighbor said during the meeting. āI asked them myself and they told me flat-out no.āĀ
The project, now called Hope Village, would open 94 units of temporary housing on county property. Designed by Dignity Moves and run by Good Samaritan Shelter, Fighting Back Santa Valley, and Marian Regional Medical Center along with county services, Hope Village would allow guests to stay on-site between six and 24 months. They will receive round-the-clock care from service providers with the ultimate goal of moving into permanent housing. Ā
Resident Steve Wagner said he doesnāt think the projectās been adequately thought out and didnāt express a lot of faith in the proposal.Ā
āThe government wonāt in fact remove graffiti from its facilities they own and operate. Now weāre expected to believe the government is going to successfully run a homeless facility? An ongoing project with some of the hardest folks to work [with], weāre supposed to have confidence that thatās going to work?ā Wagner said. āI mean itās a nice show and the pictures look great, but I think thereās a lot of skepticism, so I hope we continue to talk and I hope the concerns can be aired and dealt with.āĀ
Others asked about funding for the project and whether it will be a permanent fixture in their community as other high density projects go upāchanging the layout of the neighborhood.Ā

Initially, Hope Village will be under a five-year contract.
Santa Maria Mayor Alice Patino said the project is a Band-Aid solution to the homelessness crisis in Santa Maria, and she expressed frustration with state laws and requirements for her constituents.
āSacramento is doing nothing; theyāre just making it worse,ā Patino said. āThereās a need, but how long do we go in our lives accommodating people who donāt want to obey the rules, made bad decisions for years, and will continue to make bad decisions? We canāt put them in a recovery program; we canāt put them in an institution. I think locally we need something more than this.āĀ
To answer some of the questions, Good Samaritan Shelter Executive Director Sylvia Barnard said there will be security and staff on-site 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Individuals seeking services at the village will go through an application and referral process in order to enter, no visitors are allowed on-site, drug and alcohol consumption is not allowed, and a curfew is enforced. Ā
She said that case managers plan to work with houseless individuals in the surrounding communities to build trust and partnership to eventually move them into Hope Village, where they will develop a housing plan. About 60 percent of Good Samās clients are working to gain an income and get into housing, Barnard said. Good Sam also oversees a sobering center, detox center, residential treatment programs, and therapists in order to connect anyone with the services needed.Ā
āWe make sure everyone has a case management plan because this is temporary, this is not forever. They have six to 12 months to get to permanent housing, and we work with the county on that,ā Barnard said. āIf they arenāt following the rules or if thereās an issue and their behavior doesnāt allow them to stay, then they can be exited from the program.āĀ
Kirsten Cahoon, Good Samās director of shelter operations, added that many individuals donāt want to put their spot at risk and often comply with the rules and regulations.Ā
āOur clients love being there, they donāt want to lose their opportunity to be there, and we hold our clients accountable,ā Cahoon said. āSo if they are out in the community causing an issue, weāre finding them loitering, they arenāt following the rules, they are risking losing their space in that facility and thatās not something they want to do.āĀ
Hope Village was not designed to answer every question and concern about homelessness, 4th District Supervisor Bob Nelson said, rather itās a part of a bigger puzzle the countyās trying to address.Ā
āWeāre coming to you humbly so you know where weāre coming from on this project because we think we can turn the tables here,ā Nelson said. āItās not often you have two politicians up here, pinning their political careers on the line for a project. Itās because we believe we canāt do nothing anymore.āĀ
Fifth District Supervisor Steve Lavagnino agreed and said the city is suffering because of a lack of action. Heās not trying to exacerbate the situation, he said, heās trying to address the situation.Ā
āIt is an experiment, but the reason why weāre doing the experiment is we donāt think you should be living with [homelessness] in your front yard right now,ā Lavagnino said. āSo if a year from now the situation is considerably worse than what youāre dealing with, weāre going to have to answer to you and say whether to continue or not, but not doing anything right now isnāt the answer here.āĀ
Itās not just the political careers of county supervisors at stake, Fighting Back Santa Maria Valley Executive Director Edwin Weaver said, the reputation of many nonprofit leaders is also on the line.Ā
āWe are going to have to ask the community to let us try and hold us accountable, so speak up. If thereās something wrong, we need to fix it. We wonāt know for sure and we wonāt prove it until weāre given a chance to try,ā Weaver told the Sun on Jan. 26āafter the community meeting.Ā
Fighting Back will oversee the units for 18- to 24-year-olds who have aged out of the foster care system and need supportive services to find housingāa concept Weaver said the county needs. In the last two years, Fighting Backās case managers have met 222 homeless youth and successfully housed 100.Ā
Currently, Fighting Back has one house with a kitchen and four bedrooms thatās been helping people get off the streets, but itās a really hard transition. With Hope Village, Weaver said he hopes it will make the shift easier for people coming out of homelessness with 24-hour safety and security, privacy, and wraparound servicesāsomething that the four-bedroom house canāt do yet.Ā
āItās really the best way to get people into long-term housing. I know itās hard to understand, but having a spot where our chronically homeless people can live in peace and get recentered will allow us to develop that relationship and help them move forward,ā Weaver said.Ā
Overall, he thought the meeting went well and the public had reasonable concerns that the partners tried to address as much as possible before even approaching the community.Ā
āWe donāt want to be a part of something that is disruptive or harms the quality of life, itās actually the opposite,ā Weaver said. āWe want to increase the quality of life.ā
Reach Staff Writer Taylor OāConnor at toconnor@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Feb 2-9, 2023.

