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News

Golden State Finance Authority receives $28 million grant award for homebuyer assistance program

Award will provide homebuyer assistance to 2018 and 2020 wildfire impacted households


A program set to launch this summer offers the promise of homebuyer assistance for Lake County residents as well as residents in other counties impacted by wildfires.

Golden State Finance Authority, or GSFA, has been awarded a $28 million grant from the California Department of Housing and Community Development to support individuals and families in California impacted by the devastating wildfires and other declared disasters in 2018 and 2020.

With the grant award, GSFA will administer the ReCoverCA Homebuyer Assistance Program to enable low- and moderate-income residents — homeowners or renters — of the Most Impacted and Distressed, or MID, California counties to relocate outside of high fire zone areas.

The program will provide homeownership assistance in the form of a forgivable loan, up to $350,000 per qualifying household.

The homebuyer assistance is designed to cover the funding gap between the first mortgage loan amount and the purchase price of a home.

“Rent increases and housing costs continue to be a challenge here, especially after the unprecedented fires of 2020. Financial assistance of this size can go a long way towards helping low-and-moderate income families secure long-term housing and re-establish roots in communities,” said Napa County Supervisor Anne Cottrell.

Low-to-moderate income homeowners and renters whose primary residence, at the time of the qualifying disasters in 2018 or 2020, was inside the mandatory evacuation zone or evacuation warning zones in an MID county will be eligible to apply for the ReCoverCA Homebuyer Assistance Program.

Eligible MID counties are: 2018 — Butte, Lake, Los Angeles and Shasta Counties; 2020 — Butte, Fresno, Los Angeles, Napa, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Siskiyou, Solano and Sonoma counties.

“It is difficult for many families that lost their homes to wildfire to simply rebuild in the same location due to construction costs, fire insurance requirements and other factors. In fact, many families had to relocate temporarily, even obtaining new jobs in a different location,” said Craig Ferguson, deputy director of GSFA. “ReCoverCA homebuyer assistance will be a big boost to help them start again with long-term housing and less fire risk going forward. We are excited to be a part of such a positive recovery effort.”

The creation and implementation of the ReCoverCA Homebuyer Assistance Program centers on the goal to increase the level of homeownership among impacted disaster survivors and contribute to the affordability and sustainability of communities across the state.

The grant provided by HCD is part of the State’s Disaster Recovery Action Plan for the 2018 and 2020 disasters and made possible through a Community Development Block Grant - Disaster Recovery grant from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The program is scheduled to launch in early June 2024, when eligible households will be able to officially apply for the ReCoverCA homebuyer assistance.

Complete program guidelines will also be made available in early June and published on the GSFA website www.gsfahome.org.
Details
Written by: California Department of Housing and Community Development
Published: 16 May 2024

Kelseyville United Methodist Church partners with Lake County Library Literacy Program

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Kelseyville United Methodist Church has partnered with the Lake County Library Literacy Program to help address low literacy in Lake County.

Initiated by Pastor Isabel Budinger and with a desire to make a difference in the greater community, the church will offer its space for new tutor training, family literacy nights and one-on-one tutoring for learners in need.

On May 7, the church hosted its first literacy information session to share information about services with the community.

On Friday, May 17, the church will offer its first new tutor training, and on Wednesday, June 12, the church will host an all-ages Family Literacy Night with literacy activities, games, free books and more.

In addition to supporting learners in need, a priority for this partnership is to recruit more volunteer literacy tutors for the Adult, English as a Second Language and Lake County Jail literacy programs.

Pastor Budinger especially wants to help serve local migrant workers who are eager to become fluent in the English language. More Spanish bilingual tutors are needed for this purpose.

The Lake County Library Literacy Program provides free training, materials, and ongoing support for volunteer literacy tutors. No experience is necessary to become a literacy tutor. Volunteering is flexible for both the tutor and learner, with sessions typically held once per week for one hour.

According to World Population Review, only 76.9% of those 15 and older — considered the adult category — in California are able to read and write, making literacy an important cause.

If you are interested in becoming a literacy tutor or know someone who could benefit from services, please call 707-263-7633 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Your volunteerism could help change a life.

Visit the Literacy Program’s page on the Lake County Library website.

Georgina Marie Guardado is the Literacy Program coordinator.
Details
Written by: Georgina Marie Guardado
Published: 16 May 2024

Latest inflation figures are good news – even if they give a lot of people heartburn

 

Headline inflation is cooling, too. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images


The U.S. economy is slowing, but not crashing. In the dismal science, this is what counts as good news.

That’s the message I took away from the latest inflation data, released May 15, 2024, which showed U.S. consumer prices rising 3.4% in the 12 months to April 2024. This is down slightly from the 3.5% year-over-year increase reported in March 2024.

In other words, while prices are rising, they’re not going up as sharply as they once were. That’s good news for shoppers; the U.S. economy is far from the 9.1% annual inflation seen in June 2022.

While energy and shelter prices increased in April, these gains were relatively modest. Meanwhile, food prices remained steady compared to last year and even declined by 0.2% compared to March. What’s more, people in the market for a car were in luck: New and used vehicle prices fell 0.4% and 6.9%, respectively, in April.

The “core” consumer price index — which doesn’t include volatile food and energy prices and is often considered better at predicting future inflation than so-called “headline” CPI figures — is also down slightly. After posting a year-over-year increase of 3.9% in January and 3.8% in February and March, it slowed to 3.6% in April.

So the overall report is relatively positive: It didn’t show the uptick in inflation that many consumers feared, and reported inflation rates were actually slightly lower than market expectations.

As an economist, I see this data report as yet more evidence that economic growth is slowing — in a good way. The economy grew at a lower-than-expected 1.6% rate in the first quarter of 2024, according to the most recent gross domestic product data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The most recent jobs report also showed a slowdown in hiring, and the latest data on job vacancies similarly showed the labor market cooling off.

Why the Fed is paying close attention

The Federal Reserve’s main objective is to strike a balance between two goals: maintaining stable employment and ensuring price stability. It does this by managing and influencing interest rates.

Lowering rates stimulates the economy, which encourages economic growth and job creation – but that can fuel inflation. Raising rates does the opposite: Economic growth slows, which dampens inflation, but also hinders employment.

So, when inflation started increasing dramatically after the COVID-19 pandemic, the Federal Reserve responded with a two-year campaign of rate hikes – they’re currently at a 23-year high. Since this raises the cost of borrowing, investors and potential homebuyers are keen for the Fed to dial back its rates.

After May’s report, I don’t believe the Federal Reserve will be in any rush to cut interest rates from their current elevated level. There’s a slowdown, to be sure, but the slowdown is so steady that it’s not pulling prices down in any rapid fashion.

This is no doubt frustrating for the Fed — which has an inflation target of 2% — as well as for potential homebuyers. But it’s evidence that the economy is stable at the moment. Inflation isn’t surging, and consumer spending, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, is still growing. In March, consumer spending increased 5.8% year over year, up from February’s 4.9% rate.

All eyes on the American shopper

Going forward, hopes for a “soft landing” — economist-speak for when the Fed slows inflation without triggering a recession — will depend in large measure on U.S. shoppers. Consumer spending makes up roughly two-thirds of U.S. gross domestic product.

If American shoppers suddenly stop spending, then inflation will slow considerably, job vacancies will evaporate, and gross domestic product could contract. At that point, the Fed will turn attention away from inflation and toward economic stimulus, and rates will fall.

I mention this because a recent report by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis showed a troubling uptick in consumer credit card delinquency rates. If much of the recent increase in consumer spending is due to Americans relying more on credit cards, then the economy could be on shakier ground than it appears.

The good news is that delinquency rates are still way below where they were ahead of the Great Recession, which lasted from December 2007 through June 2009. So, while this data may be troubling, there’s no need to panic just yet.

In short, while inflation rates still aren’t to the Fed’s liking, the economy – for now – appears to be on a stable path.The Conversation

Christopher Decker, Professor of Economics, University of Nebraska Omaha

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The U.S. economy is slowing, but not crashing. In the dismal science, this is what counts as good news.
Details
Written by: Christopher Decker, University of Nebraska Omaha
Published: 16 May 2024

Santa Rosa man arrested for March Clearlake shooting that killed child

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Authorities said Wednesday that a Santa Rosa man has been arrested for a March shooting that resulted in the death of a child in Clearlake.

Fernando Lugo-Garcia, 31, was arrested Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. by Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office detectives with the Violent Crime Investigations Unit and Property Crime/Narcotics Unit for an active Lake County arrest warrant, said Lt. Ryan Peterson of the Clearlake Police Department.

Peterson said the warrant was for murder, assault with a deadly weapon and several firearms-related offenses, including being a prohibited person in possession of a firearm and ammunition.

The circumstances that led to the arrest warrant for Lugo-Garcia stemmed from a report of a shooting that occurred during a party in the 14000 block of Uhl Avenue in Clearlake on March 23 in which a 2-year-old male died, Peterson said.

Peterson said Clearlake Police officers and later detectives responded to the scene, which Lugo-Garcia had already fled.

During the investigation, police developed probable cause to believe that Lugo-Garcia was the suspect in the shooting and that he was living in the Santa Rosa area, Peterson said.

Detectives from the Clearlake Police Department coordinated with Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office detectives, who Peterson said were familiar with Lugo-Garcia from previous contacts.

Through investigative leads, Peterson said Lugo-Garcia’s location was determined, and he was taken into custody Wednesday morning by Sonoma Sheriff’s Office detectives.

Detectives from the Clearlake Police Department responded to Sonoma County to interview Lugo-Garcia and then transported him to the Lake County Jail, Peterson said.

At the time of publication on Wednesday evening, Lugo-Garcia’s booking information had not yet been posted on the Lake County Sheriff’s website.

“Our deepest sympathies go out to the family of the child from this tragic event,” Peterson said.

The Clearlake Police Department thanked the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office for its assistance in safely locating and arresting Lugo-Garcia.

Anyone with information regarding this investigation is encouraged to contact Clearlake Police Det. Leonardo Flores at 707-994-8251.
Details
Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 15 May 2024
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