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Governor Gavin Newsom has asked legislators for $1.4 billion to allocate for housing and health care for the state’s homeless, and has signed an executive order to create a $750 million fund for service providers to use to help people pay rent or help cities fund affordable housing.

In many cases, however, municipalities are also responding with law enforcement and encampment removal. The city of Redding, California, made headlines late last year when its then-mayor proposed legislation to force people to enter a shelter facility and only allow them to leave on certain conditions, like sobriety.

Independent journalist Evelyn Nieves has covered homelessness extensively and has been reporting in depth on Redding’s response to homelessness, and how it parallels trends around the region and the state.

“This population has always existed, what hasn’t existed was the kind of street homelessness we see now. Why is that? Money…Stories about homelessness never bring up the fact that federal funding has dropped.”

I host and report for “Civic,” a San Francisco public affairs radio show and podcast from the Public Press. I've been a multimedia reporter and producer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. I've reported on housing, health, immigration and homelessness for local news site Mission Local and produced conversations about local, regional and national current affairs for “Your Call,” a live call-in program on KALW-FM public radio.