Many caring hands reach out in Santa Cruz County to help the unhoused community.
California Local tracks more than two dozen topics, and one of the most pressing is homelessness. Visit the Santa Cruz County Homelessness Overview page and you’ll find articles written by our media allies and a digest of stories by other news outlets. And this week you’ll also see two stories by reporter Grace Stetson, whose work has been featured in many local publications. These are her first stories for California Local, and we’re thrilled to benefit from Stetson’s expertise on issues related to homelessness.
These articles add to the work being done by journalists about homelessness in Santa Cruz County—a problem brought into focus by the preliminary release of statistics from the Point-in-Time count done in February of unhoused individuals, and also the Aug. 9 release of a report to the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors by the county’s Human Services Department. The patient reader can survey the entire report at this link—or check out the highlights as presented by Santa Cruz Local co-founder Stephen Baxter.
Shared Problems, Separate Missions
County governments take a leading role in coping with unhoused citizens throughout California, and that’s true in Santa Cruz County as well. But the city of Santa Cruz is also deeply affected by the homelessness crisis. Though it has only 24 percent of the county’s population, more than half of the unhoused live within city limits. Reporter Grace Stetson talks to different government officials and learns that tackling homelessness is a joint effort between the county and its cities that is made more difficult without updated data.
When It Rains, Will It Pour?
California’s dry season used to be a big plus—languid days filled with sunshine for months on end. Now, caught in a megadrought that scientists now say is a decade old with no clear end in sight, every week brings more headlines about water shortages. Here are two of Jonathan Vankin’s most recent stories on the subject—including the facts behind an eddy of stories suggesting that now Californians have to start worrying about a megaflood.
Newsom’s New Drought Strategy: Create More Water
Gov. Newsom's calls to reduce water consumption to combat the ongoing drought have fallen short. His new approach? Add more water to the California's supply. A new state report details how to achieve that.