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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — As Thanksgiving approaches, the federal government has issued significant cuts to homeless housing funding, prompting 20 states — including California — to file a lawsuit on Tuesday to block the move.
On Nov. 14, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD, issued a notice of funding opportunity for its Continuum of Care, or CoC program, which is designed to support nonprofits and local governments in efforts to end homelessness.
The new policy caps the share of funds that can be used for permanent housing, a change that could put an estimated 170,000 people at risk of homelessness nationwide.
Last year, California CoCs spent about 90% of its total $683 million in funding on permanent housing projects. Under the new policy, only up to 30% can be used for permanent supportive housing and rapid rehousing.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta, along with a multistate coalition of 20 states, filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the Trump administration, “challenging abrupt changes that would cut outgoing support from established homeless housing programs," the governor’s office said in its announcement, calling the federal decision “callous and unlawful.”
“The lawsuit argues that the changes are illegal because they alter funding eligibility without authorization by Congress and are not supported by evidence or reason,” the announcement said.
In a Nov. 19 letter to the state’s congressional delegation, California State Association of Counties Chief Executive Officer Graham Knaus called the policy change “dramatic” which would displace tens of thousands of individuals from their homes and reverse progress in efforts at every level.
Counties, as direct recipients of CoC funding, would feel the impact immediately.
“The proposed policy will reverberate and have detrimental effects throughout the populations counties serve, including older adults, families, veterans, people with disabilities, transition-aged youth — as well as households connected to Medi-Cal, CalFresh, CalWORKs, and child welfare systems — and could place 26,000 people in California at risk of losing housing,” Knaus wrote.
The Governor's Office called these cuts “needlessly putting American families at risk.”
Since 2016, the state law has required all housing programs to adopt the “housing first” approach which prioritizes placing people into permanent housing without preconditions such as employment or completion of treatment.
However, the Trump Administration considered the approach failed, ordering federal agencies including HUD to take actions including “ending support for ‘housing first’ policies that deprioritize accountability.”
The Governor’s Office said California’s Housing First policy and permanent supportive housing programs have “proven successful.”
“These shifts not only threaten existing programs — they jeopardize the braided system of federal, state, and local investments that keep California’s homelessness response viable,” the Governor’s Office said.
For Lake County, permanent housing remains one of the most important indicators of local progress in addressing homelessness.
From 2020 to 2025, the Lake County Continuum of Care touched 1,378 unhoused individuals and helped 41% or 575 of them get permanently housed, according to District 2 Supervisor and Lake County CoC Chair Bruno Sabatier at an unhoused crisis town hall in September.
“That is an outstanding percentage… an absolute win for the CoC and its partners,” he said.
In rapid rehousing, the local CoC worked with 274 individuals, and 58% or 158 of them have found permanent homes, Sabatier said.
“People don't need to show that they're ready for housing. You are ready for housing just because you exist. You don’t need to graduate to housing,” Redwood Community Services Integrated Health Director Sage Wolf said at the town hall when talking about the “Housing First” approach in her work. “Ultimately housing is the thing that solves homelessness.”
Data from the Public Policy Institute of California shows that from 2023 to 2024, Lake County CoC saw a 31.3% increase in its total homeless population, including a 68% rise in unsheltered homelessness and a 15.3% decline in sheltered homelessness.
The 2025 point-in-time count recorded 362 unhoused individuals in Lake County.
In 2023, 12 deaths among Lake County’s unhoused residents were reported, followed by 14 in 2024 and 14 so far in 2025, Sabatier said in an email to Lake County News in September.
Email staff writer Lingzi Chen at
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- Written by: Lingzi Chen
The West Coast Health Alliance, or WCHA, has issued information to the public and public health professionals after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — headed by vaccine-skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — incorrectly updated its website to suggest, without scientific evidence, a causal link between vaccines and autism.
The West Coast Health Alliance was recently formed by California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii to ensure that public health recommendations are guided by safety, efficacy, transparency, access and trust.
The Alliance said it will help safeguard scientific expertise by ensuring that public health policies in member states are informed by trusted scientists, clinicians, and other public health leaders.
Through this partnership, the four states will coordinate health guidelines by aligning immunization recommendations informed by respected national medical organizations, allowing all people in the United States to receive consistent, science-based recommendations they can rely on — regardless of shifting federal actions.
"Americans deserve public health guidance grounded in science – not opinions. The West Coast Health Alliance will continue following the science, not chasing conspiracies and outdated thinking,” said Gov. Gavin Newsom.
West Coast Health Alliance statement
The West Coast Health Alliance continues to strongly recommend vaccines to protect our children, noting that rigorous research of millions of people in multiple countries over decades provides high quality evidence that vaccines are not linked to autism.
The Alliance said it is deeply concerned about inaccurate claims to the contrary recently posted on the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.
“Autism is a complex neurodevelopmental condition with multiple contributing genetic and environmental factors. Suggesting it stems from any single cause, such as vaccination, misleads families who deserve accurate guidance. It is not only a disservice to families seeking clarity about vaccines but also potentially harmful to autistic individuals and their families,” the Alliance statement said.
“Vaccines are thoroughly tested and remain one of the most important tools for preventing infectious diseases. Public health guidance on immunization must be grounded in credible, evidence-based science to help parents and caregivers who may be receiving conflicting or inaccurate messages about immunization,” the statement continued.
The Alliance encourages families to seek information from trusted health care providers and reputable medical organizations, including the American Academy of Pediatrics.
CDC’s dismantling
Since its founding, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, has been central to preventing diseases and protecting Americans from health threats.
But recent leadership changes, reduced transparency, and the sidelining of long-trusted advisory bodies have impaired the agency’s capacity to prepare the nation for the respiratory virus season and other public health challenges. In a vacuum of clear, evidence-based vaccine guidance, manufacturers lack reliable information to plan production, health care providers struggle to provide consistent plans of care, and families face uncertainty about access and coverage, the California Governor’s Office said.
For years, scientists have researched the potential links between autism and vaccines and for years scientists have found no evidence that vaccines are linked to autism.
In June, California, Oregon and Washington condemned Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s removal of all 17 members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.
The Alliance is committed to science-driven decision-making and will continue to provide clear, evidence-based guidance to people living in its states, look to scientific experts in trusted medical professional organizations for recommendations, and work with public health leaders across the country to ensure all Americans are protected.
“The absence of consistent, science-based federal leadership poses a direct threat to our nation’s health security,” the California Governor’s Office said in a statement on the situation. “President Trump failed in his first term to keep America safe from communicable diseases and his new CDC is failing to give safe scientific guidance in his second. Measles infections have even reached new highs under the Trump Administration since America eradicated the disease in 2000. To protect the health of our communities, the Alliance will continue to ensure that our public health strategies are based on the best available science.”
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- Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
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