Sacramento, California – Sacramento has spent years talking about a regional homelessness response. This week, Councilmember Caity Maple marked a vote that suggests the idea is no longer just sitting in old reports, meeting minutes and unfinished promises.
In a July 2 Facebook post, Maple celebrated the latest movement on SB 802, writing that the bill “passed unanimously out of the Assembly Local Government Committee.” The official bill record shows the measure advanced with a 9-0 vote on July 1 and was re-referred to the Assembly Appropriations Committee on July 2.
For Maple, the vote was not framed as a finish line. It was a signal. She said the work behind the bill stretches back more than 20 years, long before Senator Angelique Ashby introduced SB 802. Sacramento, Maple wrote, had studied the need for regional coordination on homelessness, prepared reports, and even voted in 2010 to create a Joint Powers Authority. But that regional structure never came together.
SB 802 aims to change that by creating a broader Sacramento Area Housing and Homelessness Agency. According to the bill language, the proposal would restructure, expand and rename the joint powers authority currently operating as the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency, turning it into a regional authority for affordable housing development, homelessness prevention and response services, funding administration and long-term planning.
The bill is built around a simple problem that has frustrated local leaders and residents for years: homelessness does not stop at city limits. Sacramento, Elk Grove, Rancho Cordova, Citrus Heights, Folsom and the county all face pieces of the same crisis, but the response has often been split across different departments, agencies and jurisdictions.
Ashby’s office described SB 802 as an effort to replace that fragmented system with a more coordinated regional model, saying the proposed agency would coordinate, fund and implement housing and homelessness programs across Sacramento County.
Maple said she has watched the county, cities and Continuum of Care come together around a governance model in a way she had not seen before. “That progress is worth celebrating,” she wrote.
She also thanked Ashby for her “leadership,” “persistence” and focus, while acknowledging the people who testified, submitted letters and joined difficult conversations around the bill.
The proposal still has more steps ahead. But Maple’s message was clear: after decades of talk, Sacramento’s regional homelessness debate has moved from theory to legislation — and, at least this week, it moved forward unanimously.