Trending...
- California and European Commission discuss cooperation to accelerate the global transition to a carbon-neutral, resilient, and equitable future
- High5VR Announces World's First Fully Immersive First-Person VR Movie
- California: Governor Newsom announces appointments 3.23.2026
News
Mar 25, 2026
Governor Newsom issues final warning to 15 communities violating state housing laws
What you need to know: California issued a final warning to 15 cities and counties that remain non-compliant with state law that requires them to plan for housing needs for residents of all income levels. The next step will be a lawsuit.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today, through the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), issued final warnings to 15 cities and counties that have failed to adhere to housing law requirements to plan for housing that meets the needs of all income levels. These jurisdictions are more than 60 days away from securing a certified housing element. They have 30 days to respond to the Notices of Violation before HCD takes further action, including referral to the Attorney General.
"I'm disappointed on behalf of the state and the people of California that after years of effort, we still have communities that aren't meeting the needs of their residents. There's no carve-out here. No community gets a pass when it comes to addressing homelessness or creating more housing access. We'll keep pushing forward by enforcing the law, fighting NIMBY actions, and holding local governments accountable, because every Californian deserves a place to call home."
Governor Gavin Newsom
Under California state housing law, every community must adopt a housing plan — known as a housing element — that demonstrates how they intend to meet regional housing needs for residents at all income levels, and must submit that plan to HCD for review. With HCD's guidance and technical assistance, coupled with enforcement, 92 percent of California communities have attained housing element compliance in the 6th cycle. Today's action addresses 15 cities and counties that remain out of compliance – beginning a final push to ensure that every California community has a plan to support housing for all income levels. These stand out from the 480 jurisdictions throughout California that have adopted a final housing element and related zoning changes necessary to comply with state law, and an additional 22 that are expected to finalize their plans within the next two months.
The 15 communities that received notice today remain more than two years behind schedule and lack a path to compliance within 60 days, indicating noncompliance and a lack of intent to adhere to state housing law. If any of the cities and counties on track to complete the steps necessary for compliance fail to do so within the next 60 days, they, too, will receive a Notice of Violation and may face a lawsuit.
More housing. More accountability.
Governor Newsom established HCD's Housing Accountability Unit in 2021 to ensure that every community is meeting its obligations to plan for housing and follow state housing laws. In 2024, Governor Newsom expanded the unit's oversight to also include monitoring cities' and counties' efforts to address homelessness. The HAU has "unlocked" 12,486 housing units, including over 3,644 affordable units, that may otherwise have been stuck in the local planning process.
The HAU has taken more than 1,200 accountability actions to date, including securing 10 stipulated judgments and settlement agreements. HCD has also filed five lawsuits, against Anaheim, Elk Grove, La Canada Flintridge, Norwalk, and Huntington Beach. HCD has secured an agreement or favorable court ruling in all five.
The Housing Accountability Unit sent Notices of Violation to 15 cities and counties with housing elements that have not demonstrated a near-term path to compliance with state law — despite extensive and ongoing technical assistance from HCD.
The 15 jurisdictions that received Notices of Violation this week are: Atwater, Avenal, California City, Corcoran, Escalon, Half Moon Bay, Hanford, Kings County, Lemoore, Merced County, Montclair, Oakdale, Patterson, Ridgecrest, and Turlock. HCD has previously entered court-enforced agreements with San Bernardino, Coronado, Fullerton, Malibu, La Habra Heights, Artesia, and Norwalk, and is in active litigation against Huntington Beach, regarding housing element compliance.
Should these communities fail to meet compliance, they are subject to potential legal action by the state.
Californians can track how their community is addressing mental health, homelessness, and housing at accountability.ca.gov.
Reversing decades of inaction on homelessness
Governor Newsom is the first Governor in state history to make addressing the housing and homelessness crises a statewide priority. Creating affordable housing for Californians and ensuring that every community follows state housing law are key components in meeting this goal. Governor Newsom is creating a structural and foundational model for America:
More on The Californer
✅ 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.
✅ Addressing mental health and its impact on homelessness — Ending a long-standing 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 behavioral health systems — delivering more than the promised 6,800 residential treatment beds (6,919) and 26,700 outpatient treatment slots (27,561) for behavioral health care to date.
✅ 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-administered plans for up to 24 months for people struggling with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, often with substance use challenges.
✅ 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. In 2025, just a year after he issued an executive order urging local governments to better address encampments, the Governor announced his State Action for Facilitation on Encampments (SAFE) Task Force to address encampments in California's ten largest cities. The task force has addressed encampments in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Sacramento, and Fresno — connecting dozens of people with shelter. Since 2021, Caltrans has removed more than 20,600 encampments on state right-of-way, offered services to nearly 62,000 people, and collected approximately 3.4 million cubic yards of litter and debris.
More on The Californer
Housing and homelessness, Press releases (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/press-releases/), Recent news (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/recent-news/), Top story (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/top-story/)
Recent news
Governor Newsom announces appointments 3.27.26 (https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gov.ca.gov%2F2026%2F03%2F25%2Fgovernor-newsom-issues-final-warning-to-15-communities-violating-state-housing-laws%2F&linkname=Governor%20Newsom%20issues%20final%20warning%20to%2015%20communities%20violating%20state%20housing%20laws%20%7C%20Governor%20of%20California)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:Madeline Drake, of Sacramento, has been appointed Deputy Secretary for Biodiversity and Habitat at the California Natural Resources Agency. Drake has been the Assistant Secretary for...
Governor Newsom announces judicial appointments 3.27.2026 (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-announces-judicial-appointments-3/)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom announced his appointment of 15 Superior Court Judges: one in Alameda County, two in Contra Costa County, one in Kern County, one in Kings County, three in Los Angeles County, one in Madera County, one in Placer County, one in...
Governor Newsom strengthens bans on insider betting by state officials, takes aim at corruption fueled by Trump (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-strengthens-bans-on-insider-betting-by-state-officials-takes-aim-at-corruption-fueled-by-trump/)
Mar 27, 2026
News What you need to know: Governor Newsom today issued an executive order strengthening prohibitions against using non-public information to profit personally, explicitly cracking down on the potential use of prediction markets by state employees in the Newsom...
News (https://www.gov.ca.gov/newsroom/)
Mar 25, 2026
Governor Newsom issues final warning to 15 communities violating state housing laws
Housing and homelessness (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/content-types/housing-and-homelessness/), Press releases (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/press-releases/), Recent news (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/recent-news/), Top story (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/top-story/)
Recent news
Governor Newsom announces appointments 3.27.26 (https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gov.ca.gov%2F2026%2F03%2F25%2Fgovernor-newsom-issues-final-warning-to-15-communities-violating-state-housing-laws%2F&linkname=Governor%20Newsom%20issues%20final%20warning%20to%2015%20communities%20violating%20state%20housing%20laws%20%7C%20Governor%20of%20California)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:Madeline Drake, of Sacramento, has been appointed Deputy Secretary for Biodiversity and Habitat at the California Natural Resources Agency. Drake has been the Assistant Secretary for...
Governor Newsom announces judicial appointments 3.27.2026 (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-announces-judicial-appointments-3/)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom announced his appointment of 15 Superior Court Judges: one in Alameda County, two in Contra Costa County, one in Kern County, one in Kings County, three in Los Angeles County, one in Madera County, one in Placer County, one in...
Governor Newsom strengthens bans on insider betting by state officials, takes aim at corruption fueled by Trump (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-strengthens-bans-on-insider-betting-by-state-officials-takes-aim-at-corruption-fueled-by-trump/)
Mar 27, 2026
News What you need to know: Governor Newsom today issued an executive order strengthening prohibitions against using non-public information to profit personally, explicitly cracking down on the potential use of prediction markets by state employees in the Newsom...
Mar 25, 2026
Governor Newsom issues final warning to 15 communities violating state housing laws
What you need to know: California issued a final warning to 15 cities and counties that remain non-compliant with state law that requires them to plan for housing needs for residents of all income levels. The next step will be a lawsuit.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today, through the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), issued final warnings to 15 cities and counties that have failed to adhere to housing law requirements to plan for housing that meets the needs of all income levels. These jurisdictions are more than 60 days away from securing a certified housing element. They have 30 days to respond to the Notices of Violation before HCD takes further action, including referral to the Attorney General.
"I'm disappointed on behalf of the state and the people of California that after years of effort, we still have communities that aren't meeting the needs of their residents. There's no carve-out here. No community gets a pass when it comes to addressing homelessness or creating more housing access. We'll keep pushing forward by enforcing the law, fighting NIMBY actions, and holding local governments accountable, because every Californian deserves a place to call home."
Governor Gavin Newsom
Under California state housing law, every community must adopt a housing plan — known as a housing element — that demonstrates how they intend to meet regional housing needs for residents at all income levels, and must submit that plan to HCD for review. With HCD's guidance and technical assistance, coupled with enforcement, 92 percent of California communities have attained housing element compliance in the 6th cycle. Today's action addresses 15 cities and counties that remain out of compliance – beginning a final push to ensure that every California community has a plan to support housing for all income levels. These stand out from the 480 jurisdictions throughout California that have adopted a final housing element and related zoning changes necessary to comply with state law, and an additional 22 that are expected to finalize their plans within the next two months.
The 15 communities that received notice today remain more than two years behind schedule and lack a path to compliance within 60 days, indicating noncompliance and a lack of intent to adhere to state housing law. If any of the cities and counties on track to complete the steps necessary for compliance fail to do so within the next 60 days, they, too, will receive a Notice of Violation and may face a lawsuit.
More housing. More accountability.
Governor Newsom established HCD's Housing Accountability Unit in 2021 to ensure that every community is meeting its obligations to plan for housing and follow state housing laws. In 2024, Governor Newsom expanded the unit's oversight to also include monitoring cities' and counties' efforts to address homelessness. The HAU has "unlocked" 12,486 housing units, including over 3,644 affordable units, that may otherwise have been stuck in the local planning process.
The HAU has taken more than 1,200 accountability actions to date, including securing 10 stipulated judgments and settlement agreements. HCD has also filed five lawsuits, against Anaheim, Elk Grove, La Canada Flintridge, Norwalk, and Huntington Beach. HCD has secured an agreement or favorable court ruling in all five.
The Housing Accountability Unit sent Notices of Violation to 15 cities and counties with housing elements that have not demonstrated a near-term path to compliance with state law — despite extensive and ongoing technical assistance from HCD.
The 15 jurisdictions that received Notices of Violation this week are: Atwater, Avenal, California City, Corcoran, Escalon, Half Moon Bay, Hanford, Kings County, Lemoore, Merced County, Montclair, Oakdale, Patterson, Ridgecrest, and Turlock. HCD has previously entered court-enforced agreements with San Bernardino, Coronado, Fullerton, Malibu, La Habra Heights, Artesia, and Norwalk, and is in active litigation against Huntington Beach, regarding housing element compliance.
Should these communities fail to meet compliance, they are subject to potential legal action by the state.
Californians can track how their community is addressing mental health, homelessness, and housing at accountability.ca.gov.
Reversing decades of inaction on homelessness
Governor Newsom is the first Governor in state history to make addressing the housing and homelessness crises a statewide priority. Creating affordable housing for Californians and ensuring that every community follows state housing law are key components in meeting this goal. Governor Newsom is creating a structural and foundational model for America:
More on The Californer
- Snell & Wilmer Attorneys Emily Cheung and Kina Wong Appointed Co-Leads of CALA-OC Young Lawyers Cmte
- Long Beach: El Dorado East Regional Park Offers Tips for Visitors on Easter Sunday, April 5
- Classified Employees of the Year Celebrated Across the Ventura County Community College District
- House of Buneau Releases "Pretty Boy Heaven," A Cinematic Exploration of Beauty and Distance
- Bobotails Launches Premium Matching Harness Collections for Small & Medium Breed Dogs
✅ 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.
✅ Addressing mental health and its impact on homelessness — Ending a long-standing 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 behavioral health systems — delivering more than the promised 6,800 residential treatment beds (6,919) and 26,700 outpatient treatment slots (27,561) for behavioral health care to date.
✅ 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-administered plans for up to 24 months for people struggling with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, often with substance use challenges.
✅ 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. In 2025, just a year after he issued an executive order urging local governments to better address encampments, the Governor announced his State Action for Facilitation on Encampments (SAFE) Task Force to address encampments in California's ten largest cities. The task force has addressed encampments in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Sacramento, and Fresno — connecting dozens of people with shelter. Since 2021, Caltrans has removed more than 20,600 encampments on state right-of-way, offered services to nearly 62,000 people, and collected approximately 3.4 million cubic yards of litter and debris.
More on The Californer
- Homeowner Prep Announces Strategic Language Shift: Replacing "Renters" with "Future Homeowners" to Inspire Wealth-Building Mindsets
- LiposoMore™ Redefines Bioavailability: Joyful Nutritional Launches High-Performance Liposomal Vitamin C and Iron for the Global Supplement Market
- California: Governor Newsom strengthens bans on insider betting by state officials, takes aim at corruption fueled by Trump
- GDE Tree Services Expands Operations into Sydney, NSW
- Tuckwell Machinery Expands CNC Range to Support Australian Cabinet Makers
Housing and homelessness, Press releases (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/press-releases/), Recent news (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/recent-news/), Top story (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/top-story/)
Recent news
Governor Newsom announces appointments 3.27.26 (https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gov.ca.gov%2F2026%2F03%2F25%2Fgovernor-newsom-issues-final-warning-to-15-communities-violating-state-housing-laws%2F&linkname=Governor%20Newsom%20issues%20final%20warning%20to%2015%20communities%20violating%20state%20housing%20laws%20%7C%20Governor%20of%20California)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:Madeline Drake, of Sacramento, has been appointed Deputy Secretary for Biodiversity and Habitat at the California Natural Resources Agency. Drake has been the Assistant Secretary for...
Governor Newsom announces judicial appointments 3.27.2026 (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-announces-judicial-appointments-3/)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom announced his appointment of 15 Superior Court Judges: one in Alameda County, two in Contra Costa County, one in Kern County, one in Kings County, three in Los Angeles County, one in Madera County, one in Placer County, one in...
Governor Newsom strengthens bans on insider betting by state officials, takes aim at corruption fueled by Trump (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-strengthens-bans-on-insider-betting-by-state-officials-takes-aim-at-corruption-fueled-by-trump/)
Mar 27, 2026
News What you need to know: Governor Newsom today issued an executive order strengthening prohibitions against using non-public information to profit personally, explicitly cracking down on the potential use of prediction markets by state employees in the Newsom...
News (https://www.gov.ca.gov/newsroom/)
Mar 25, 2026
Governor Newsom issues final warning to 15 communities violating state housing laws
Housing and homelessness (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/content-types/housing-and-homelessness/), Press releases (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/press-releases/), Recent news (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/recent-news/), Top story (https://www.gov.ca.gov/category/top-story/)
Recent news
Governor Newsom announces appointments 3.27.26 (https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gov.ca.gov%2F2026%2F03%2F25%2Fgovernor-newsom-issues-final-warning-to-15-communities-violating-state-housing-laws%2F&linkname=Governor%20Newsom%20issues%20final%20warning%20to%2015%20communities%20violating%20state%20housing%20laws%20%7C%20Governor%20of%20California)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:Madeline Drake, of Sacramento, has been appointed Deputy Secretary for Biodiversity and Habitat at the California Natural Resources Agency. Drake has been the Assistant Secretary for...
Governor Newsom announces judicial appointments 3.27.2026 (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-announces-judicial-appointments-3/)
Mar 27, 2026
News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom announced his appointment of 15 Superior Court Judges: one in Alameda County, two in Contra Costa County, one in Kern County, one in Kings County, three in Los Angeles County, one in Madera County, one in Placer County, one in...
Governor Newsom strengthens bans on insider betting by state officials, takes aim at corruption fueled by Trump (https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/03/27/governor-newsom-strengthens-bans-on-insider-betting-by-state-officials-takes-aim-at-corruption-fueled-by-trump/)
Mar 27, 2026
News What you need to know: Governor Newsom today issued an executive order strengthening prohibitions against using non-public information to profit personally, explicitly cracking down on the potential use of prediction markets by state employees in the Newsom...
0 Comments
Latest on The Californer
- Long Beach: Meredith Reynolds Appointed as Acting Director of Technology and Innovation Department
- California: Governor Newsom announces CHP crackdown: 12,600 arrests, 6,400 stolen cars recovered, 25 million deadly fentanyl doses seized in two years
- Award-Winning REALTOR® Paige Coker Joins Corcoran DeRonja Real Estate
- License Plate Owner Lookup API Goes Live on RapidAPI and Postman Public Network
- Over 98% of crypto owners globally don't declare taxes, new report find
- TicTac Group acquires French EdTech company Distrisoft
- TL Foundation Supports Connect's 2026 Cool Companies to Strengthen San Diego's Innovation Economy
- Equestrian Expert Rominger Receives National Recognition Through the INDEPENDENT PRESS AWARD®!
- Scientology Network Celebrates International Day of Happiness with Global Marathon
- New Platform Helps Gig Workers Avoid Paying Taxes on Income They Never Received
- Comedian Marc Yaffee Headlines Willits High School Sober Grad Fundraiser Show
- California: Governor Newsom convenes leaders to confront crisis facing boys and men
- Governor Newsom launches campaign to recruit young men, and all Californians, to serve communities and gain job skills
- VCCCD Announces Ventura College Presidential Finalists
- Squeegex Expands Window Cleaning and Exterior Services Across 30+ San Diego Neighborhoods
- Long Beach: City Recognizes Tsunami Preparedness Week 2026: Know the Risk. Know the Route.
- Mark Dobosz Makes Donorassess.org Free To Every Nonprofit On The Planet
- THE DASH CAM: THINKWARE Launches Big Spring Sale on Select Dash Cam Models
- Genpak Announces Closure of Utah Manufacturing Facility
- Magai V3 Launches to Deliver a Faster, Cleaner, More Capable AI Workspace