Article Source: CA Governor Newsom
Monday, December 8, 2025
Governor Newsom helps provide more than a thousand Californians with homes
Invests $181.1 million to connect lower-income Californians with homeownership, revitalize neighborhoods
What you need to know:
Advancing Governor Newsom’s commitment to housing equity and
affordability, California is awarding $181.1 million in funding to help
thousands of low-income Californians attain or maintain the dream of
homeownership.
SACRAMENTO — Governor Gavin
Newsom today announced nearly $181.1 million in grant funding to
revitalize communities and increase homeownership opportunities for
1,275 lower-income California households — including agricultural
workers and their families. The funding was provided through a
streamlined process created by the Newsom administration to help
simplify the process for communities to access funding and create
housing.
“This year, more California families will have a place to call home
because of the vital, durable state investments that are literally
building up our communities — creating real projects and putting real
keys in hands. We’re cutting red tape, expanding affordability, and
accelerating access so the promise of homeownership is within reach for
more California families.”
Governor Gavin Newsom
“Homeownership is one of the greatest tools for creating generational
financial security, and one that is increasingly difficult to attain,”
said California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency
Secretary Tomiquia Moss. “Through CalHOME and the Serna program, we are
working with amazing partners to address historical inequities in
homeownership, strengthening California communities.”
In 2019, during his first State of the State, Governor Newsom announced
the state would begin focusing on the housing and homelessness crisis —
becoming the first Governor in history to make this issue a statewide
priority. Governor Newsom has advanced measures to tackle California’s
decades-long crisis of housing affordability and homelessness with an
unprecedented singular focus.
Through new programs and funding, California is outperforming the
nation in turning around the decades-in-the-making homelessness crisis.
A key part of the Governor’s strategy is increasing California’s
housing inventory, helping strengthen affordability and helping every
family achieve the California Dream. The Governor has also streamlined
the process for communities to access funding and support to create new
housing. This includes through the creation of the Homeownership Super
NOFA (HOSN) in 2019 which developed a one-stop shop for
affordable homeownership projects and programs.
Helping Californians access housing
Today’s CalHOME program and Joe Serna Jr. Farmworker Housing (Serna, or
FWHG) awards, administered by the California Department of Housing and
Community Development (HCD), will create 74 CalHOME projects in 22 California counties and benefit 1,172 households,
while six Serna homeownership projects are expected to help another 103
farmworker households. To date, the HOSN program has awarded $447.57
million to help 4,074 California households in 40 California counties
attain or maintain homeownership. In just two years, the Serna program
has extended homeownership opportunities to 192 farmworker families.
“The Homeownership Super NOFA provides a powerful investment for
Californians,” said HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez. “This funding makes
homeownership possible for lower-income households, creating
generational change that not only preserves but revitalizes communities
throughout the state.”
The Homeownership Super NOFA (HOSN) administered by the California
Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), is a one-stop
shop for affordable homeownership projects and programs. Under this
HOSN round, both CalHOME and Serna funded first-time homebuyer mortgage
assistance. Serna also funded programs for the purchase of manufactured
homes, while CalHOME funded: homeownership development project loans;
owner-occupied rehabilitation assistance; technical assistance for
self-help housing projects and shared housing programs; accessory
dwelling unit programs; and the acquisition of manufactured housing.
Both CalHOME and Serna grants are available to nonprofits, local
governments, and tribal entities; limited liability corporations and
limited partnerships are also eligible for Serna homeownership activity
awards.
To learn more about HCD’s Homeownership Super NOFA and the CalHOME and
Serna awards announced today, visit Homeownership Super NOFA |
California Department of Housing and Community Development.
An approach that works
From the very first moments of the Newsom administration, the national
crisis of housing and homelessness – which were decades in the making –
has been addressed with ingenuity, seriousness, and expertise. No other
state has devoted as much time and attention to these twin problems –
and California is a leader in producing positive results. Governor
Newsom is creating a structural and foundational model for the entire
country:
✅ Addressing mental health and its impact on homelessness — Ending a
long-standing 7,000 behavioral health bed shortfall in California by
rapidly expanding community treatment centers and permanent supportive
housing units. In 2024, voters approved Governor Newsom’s Proposition 1
which is transforming California’s mental health systems with a $6.4
billion Behavioral Health Bond for treatment settings and housing with
services for veterans and people experiencing homelessness, and
reforming the Behavioral Health Services Act to focus on people with
the most serious illnesses, provide care to people with substance
disorders, and support their housing needs.
✅ Creating new pathways for those who need the most help — Updating
conservatorship laws for the first time in 50 years to include people
who are unable to provide for their personal safety or necessary
medical care, in addition to food, clothing, or shelter, due to either
severe substance use disorder or serious mental health illness.
Creating a new CARE court system that creates court-ordered plans for
up to 24 months for people struggling with untreated mental illness,
and often substance use challenges.
✅ Streamlining and prioritizing building of new housing — Governor
Newsom made creating more housing a state priority for the first time
in history. He has signed into law groundbreaking reforms to break down
systemic barriers that have stood in the way of building the housing
Californians need, including broad CEQA reforms.
✅ Creating shelter and support — Providing funding and programs for
local governments, coupled with strong accountability measures to
ensure that each local government is doing its share to build housing,
and create shelter and support, so that people living in encampments
have a safe place to go.
✅ Removing dangerous encampments — Governor Newsom has set a strong
expectation for all local governments to address encampments in their
communities and help connect people with support. In 2024, Governor
Newsom filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court defending
communities’ authority to clear encampments. After the Supreme Court
affirmed local authority, Governor Newsom issued an executive order
directing state entities and urging local governments to clear
encampments and connect people with support, using a state-tested model
that helps ensure encampments are addressed humanely and people are
given adequate notice and support.
Reversing a decades-in-the-making crisis
The Newsom administration is making significant progress in reversing
decades of inaction on homelessness. Between 2014 and 2019—before
Governor Newsom took office—unsheltered homelessness in California rose
by approximately 37,000 people. Since then, under this Administration,
California has significantly slowed that growth, even as many other
states have seen worsening trends.
In 2024, while homelessness increased nationally by over 18%,
California limited its overall increase to just 3% — a lower rate than
in 40 other states. The state also held the growth of unsheltered
homelessness to just 0.45%, compared to a national increase of nearly
7%. States like Florida, Texas, New York, and Illinois saw larger
increases both in percentage and absolute numbers. California also
achieved the nation’s largest reduction in veteran homelessness and
made meaningful progress in reducing youth homelessness.