Skip to content

Grants Support Housing, Homeless Programs

Kaiser Permanente announces 2 new grants in line with its mission to create healthy communities through housing support. Pictured, Melissa Keller, center, and her 2 children, Makayla Griego, left, and Kayden Keller, right, play on the swing set at the Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa homeless shelter.

As part of its commitment to support affordable housing and homeless transition programs in Northern California, Kaiser Permanente announced 2 new grants of $1 million each to organizations in Oakland and Santa Rosa.

In the last year, Kaiser Permanente has committed over $30 million to house homeless residents and preserve affordability in Northern California as part of a multi-year effort to improve the health of the communities it serves.

Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Santa Rosa will use a $1-million grant to help fund an affordable housing and homeless services project in fire-ravaged Santa Rosa that is projected to house 1,300 homeless individuals each year, doubling the number it currently helps.

And in Oakland, the East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation will use a $1-million grant over 4 years to help buy apartment buildings to preserve affordability and add social services for residents who live in them.

Housing Essential to Good Health

Kaiser Permanente Northern California Community Benefit Managing Director Sherry Novick said the grants are critical for Bay Area housing markets where low-income residents are being displaced at an alarming rate.

“Having a roof over your head and access to social services are directly related to good health,” Novick said. “That’s why Kaiser Permanente is investing in programs like these to make a sustainable impact on the total health of our communities.”

Ashley Chadwick, left, and her son Nathan Isaiah, age 2, live in the Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa homeless shelter. With the help of Kaiser Permanente and other supporters, a new shelter will offer expanded accommodations.

In Santa Rosa, Catholic Charities is building a $115-million project called Caritas Village with 128 affordable housing units, a 40-bed post-hospitalization recuperation center for homeless residents, a new 40-room homeless shelter, and a homeless services center. The organization also will add 30 to 40 new staff members to help a growing homeless population in the area.

“We purchased the property in 2015 in the same block as our current building, thinking that we would just need to replace our family homeless shelter,” said Catholic Charities Chief Development Officer Rebecca Kendall. “Then the fires hit in 2017 and we knew immediately we needed to think bigger, and that the fires would be felt a long time in the community.”

A Sonoma County report released in July said 5,297 homes were lost in the fires and there are 21,725 temporarily housed individuals in danger of becoming homeless. Kaiser Permanente has committed $9.5 million to date to help Santa Rosa recover from the 2017 fires.

Preserving Affordable Housing in Oakland

The $1-million grant to the East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation (EBALDC) will help purchase apartment buildings in Oakland neighborhoods, said Jill Kunishima, director of development and communications. The grant comes on the heels of a separate $5.2 million Kaiser Permanente investment made in January, that enabled EBALDC to purchase an apartment building in Oakland’s San Antonio neighborhood.

Kunishima said EBALDC apartment buildings have on-site services that connect residents to culturally appropriate social services.

“The majority of our buildings have resident coordinators to help connect people to social services, such as after school homework programs, dental clinics, computer labs, and family resource centers,” said Kunishima. “We know there are many issues that affect a person’s health, such as access to health care, housing, public safety and social cohesion. And we know that Kaiser shares that view.”

Tags

housingOaklandSanta Rosa

This Post Has 3 Comments

  1. This is really good to share with the employees at Kaiser, that our company that we are working for is helping the homeless community… Thank you.

Leave a Reply

Comments Disclaimer

Many articles and features on Look insideKP Northern California offer readers the opportunity to share their opinions about a specific topic by making comments. Please do not include any confidential information in your comments, such as personal, medical, or financial information. Comments should be respectful and on-topic. We reserve the right to edit comments as necessary, will only post comments meeting our criteria, and in some instances reserve the right to not post comments. Thank you.

Back To Top

Don't miss out on stories from Look InsideKP
Northern California

Opt in to receive story headlines weekly.