Seth Newman of Friends of the Mission, left, Woodland City Manager Ken Hiatt, Woodland City Councilman Tom Stallard, and Scott Thurmond of Friends of the Mission, right, discuss the tiny homes village at its dedication ceremony in November 2022. (Photo by Spencer Bowen/City of Woodland)
Full article by Wendy Weitzel available at Sacramento News & Review

A Woodland project aims to end the cycle of homelessness by offering a range of lodging and services to help vulnerable residents stay safe, healthy and achieve housing stability.  

When complete, the $35 million East Beamer Neighborhood Campus Project will provide temporary and permanent housing for 170 people and substance use treatment for 60.

The neighborhood includes three complementary parts. The first, a 100-person emergency shelter, opened in early 2021. The second, which opened in October, is a “tiny home” village of permanent, supportive housing — 31 furnished duplexes of one- and two-bedroom units. The last piece will be a 60-bed treatment facility, Walter’s House, which broke ground on March 31. 

Full article by Wendy Weitzel available at Sacramento News & Review