Governor Gavin Newsom’s senior homelessness advisor, Hafsa Kaka, was in town on Wednesday, touring the housing and support centers operating in Isla Vista, Goleta, and Santa Barbara, as well as the site of the soon-to-be-built La Posada in Noleta. Santa Barbara County received two large state grants to resolve homeless encampments, one this year for $6 million toward riverbeds and creeks and another in 2022 to put $2.5 million toward rail and highway areas. The state’s new homeless advisor was here to learn about the innovative initiatives being undertaken to rehouse some of those displaced, said Kimberlee Albers, who manages Santa Barbara County’s Homelessness Assistance Program.
Kaka (pronounced Kay-ka) stopped at the Hedges House of Hope in Isla Vista, as well as at DignityMoves’ tiny-home village in downtown Santa Barbara and Goleta’s Buena Tierra, which is under construction and transforming the former Super 8 motel near Fairview and Hollister. DignityMoves has quietly existed at 1016 Santa Barbara Street for about a year, and Kaka admired the tomatoes growing and the flowers blooming there in containers. At Hedges House, the visit took place while a kitchen remodel was going on, but Kaka was able to speak with several residents comfortably, Albers said. Operated by Good Samaritan, Hedges House is an emergency shelter named for Father Jon-Stephen Hedges, long a propellant toward progress in meeting the needs of homeless individuals in Isla Vista before his death in 2021.
Appropriately enough, at Father Jon’s last posting — Goleta’s St. Athanasius Orthodox Church, which had moved from Isla Vista in 2014 — the Showers of Blessing trailer sets up on Thursday mornings. There, and also at the other four spots the shower trailers visit weekly, guests receive toiletries, clean clothes as needed, and a hot shower. They can also enroll in the county’s Coordinated Entry System, which is the first step toward obtaining a berth at one of the permanent supportive homes soon to come online.