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File Number: 18-432 <br />provides “Basic Needs” services, including emergency food and clothing and other family support <br />services such as medical/dental services, employment counseling, and housing assistance to <br />low-income and working poor individuals and families. For FY 2017-2018, Davis Street served <br />5,037 total unduplicated persons, of which 4,039 (or 80%) were San Leandro residents. Davis <br />Street provided 1,712 households with over 22,700 meals. <br />Priority/Action: Community Development Needs-Public Services/Provide Grants to <br />non-profit social services (cont.) <br />Child Abuse Listening, Interviewing, and Coordination Center (CALICO): CALICO's San <br />Leandro Child Abuse Intervention Project provides family support services to improve mental <br />health outcomes for San Leandro toddlers, children, adolescents, and adults living with <br />developmental disabilities who have suffered physical or sexual abuse or neglect, and for the <br />caregivers of those victims. During FY 2017-2018, CALICO served 39 households (all of which <br />were San Leandro households) comprised of 81 people. Additionally, a CALICO Family <br />Resource Specialist provided on-site crisis intervention, information and referrals to 34 <br />unduplicated caregivers (88% of all households served) of children who were victims of abuse or <br />witnessed violence or other similar traumatic experience. <br />SOS/Meals on Wheels: SOS/Meals on Wheels Program serves seniors (persons 60 years of <br />age or older) unable to buy or prepare food for themselves. This meal delivery service provides <br />warm, nutritious, and balanced meals that are one-third of a senior’s recommended daily dietary <br />allowance. A secondary outcome of the service comes from food delivery staff reporting <br />perceived illness or safety issues, which is a critical safety net for homebound seniors. In FY <br />2017-2018, a total of 165 homebound seniors in 141 households were served by this program. <br />Objective: Affordable Housing <br />HOME Investment Partnership (HOME) Program <br />The City of San Leandro participates in the Alameda County HOME Consortium, which is made <br />up of Alameda County cities (including the unincorporated areas), excluding Berkeley and <br />Oakland. The City of San Leandro receives HOME funds via a formula allocation through the <br />Alameda County HOME Consortium. A portion of those funds are used for administrative <br />overhead that covers staff costs. The rest of the funds are intended for housing projects. Since the <br />City’s annual allocation is not typically large enough to be used for a HOME eligible housing <br />program, Alameda County HOME Consortium cities pool their funds so that they can be used on <br />a competitive and/or rotating basis among member cities. <br />In FY 2017-2018, the City of San Leandro, through the HOME Consortium, was allocated <br />$162,875 of which $9,593 was allocated to cover administrative overhead. The remaining <br />$153,282 was used to pay down construction pool funding to City of San Leandro affordable <br />housing developments. As was noted in last year’s CAPER, HOME Consortium funds were <br />allocated to three San Leandro affordable housing projects constructed in the last 6 years: <br />$650,000 for Marea Alta, $100,000 for the acquisition and rehabilitation of a single family <br />residential property that will be used for supportive housing for physically and/or developmentally <br />disabled adults, and $256,761 for La Vereda (aka San Leandro Senior Housing or Marea Alta <br />Page 3 City of San Leandro Printed on 9/11/2018