California
At Oakland Encampment, Governor Newsom and Cabinet Members Discuss California’s Homelessness Crisis and Solutions | California Governor
The Governor’s $14 billion plan to sort out homelessness is an all-of-government method targeted on shelter, rehousing methods, and psychological and behavioral well being companies
OAKLAND – Governor Gavin Newsom at this time took his Cupboard members to go to an encampment in Oakland to debate the inhumane residing circumstances too many Californians face. Since his first day in workplace, the Governor has made addressing homelessness a prime precedence for the administration. Governor Newsom’s multibillion-dollar plan to sort out homelessness is an all-government effort to quickly present housing and connections to behavioral and bodily well being supportive companies to people experiencing homelessness, whereas additionally cleansing up the state’s freeway off-ramps and encampments.
“Encampments throughout our state are fixed reminders of the damaged goals of struggling Californians and their family members, making them a cussed, painful challenge that we should sort out with empathy,” stated Governor Newsom. “Homelessness impacts us all and California is taking an all-hands method to sort out this problem from each angle.”
Governor Newsom and Cupboard members stroll encampment web site in Oakland
The Governor and his Cupboard members walked the Oakland encampment and spoke immediately with folks experiencing homelessness. The go to was adopted by a Cupboard assembly to debate the methods all state companies can make use of to sort out the homelessness disaster.
Governor Newsom’s multibillion-dollar homeless housing investments will present greater than 55,000 new housing models and therapy slots within the coming years. Constructing on final 12 months’s historic $12 billion funding to assist get probably the most susceptible folks off the streets, the California Blueprint proposes a further $2 billion funding in behavioral well being housing and encampment rehousing methods, creating a complete $14 billion bundle to confront the homelessness disaster.
Earlier this 12 months, the Governor introduced $50 million in grants by the California Homeless Coordinating and Financing Council’s Encampment Decision Grant Program, which was created in partnership with the Legislature. The grants will serve 19 communities all through California to supply shelter or housing for 1,401 people at present experiencing homelessness in encampments.
In September 2021, Governor Newsom set a aim of cleansing 100 encampments – since then, the state has cleaned 728 encampments, coordinating with native governments that present housing and companies to former residents. The state is on track to clear 1,000 encampments by the top of 2022.
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California
72-hour rain totals across Northern California
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California
Magnitude 3.5 earthquake recorded in Malibu, California Friday afternoon
An earthquake shook along the Southern California coast Friday afternoon.
The earthquake reportedly occurred in Malibu, west of Los Angeles, at 2:15 p.m. local time, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
The temblor, which was recorded at a depth of nearly 6 miles, measured a preliminary magnitude of 3.5.
It was not immediately clear if there was any damage.
California
California bomb cyclone brings record rain, major mudslide risk
An atmospheric river dumping rain across Northern California and several feet of snow in the Sierras was making its way across the state Friday, bringing flooding and threatening mudslides along with it.
The storm, the first big one of the season, moved over California as a bomb cyclone, a description of how it rapidly intensified before making its way onshore.
On Thursday, rain poured across the northern edge of the state, slowly moving south. It rained 3.66 inches in Ukiah on Thursday, breaking the record for the city set in 1977 by a half-inch. Santa Rosa Airport saw 4.93 inches of rain on Thursday, shattering the daily record set in 2001 of 0.93 inches.
More rain is due Friday.
“Prolonged rainfall will result in an increased risk of flooding, an increased risk of landslides, and downed trees and power lines across the North Bay,” the National Weather Service’s Bay Area office wrote in a Friday morning forecast.
After its initial peak, the system is expected to linger into the weekend, with a second wave of rainfall extending farther south across most of the San Francisco Bay Area, down into the Central Coast and possibly reaching parts of Southern California.
On Saturday, Los Angeles and Ventura counties could see anywhere from a tenth to a third of an inch of rain. San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties could see up to an inch in some areas.
A second round of rain expected to begin Sunday could be “a little stronger than the first but still likely in the ‘beneficial rain’ category,” the National Weather Service said in its latest L.A. forecast.
Chances are low of flooding or any other significant issues in Southern California, forecasters said, though roads could be slick and snarl traffic.
Staff writer Grace Toohey contributed to this report.
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