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Lucky Duck Foundation is offering funding to prevent capacity reductions

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City of San Diego is proposing reducing shelter capacity despite 9 in 10 requests for shelter going unfulfilled

The Lucky Duck Foundation (LDF) today announced the launch of a new countywide shelter inventory tool that will publicly track shelter capacity across every city in San Diego County. At the same time, LDF announced it is prepared to deploy philanthropic resources to help the City of San Diego avoid further shelter reductions amid ongoing budget challenges.

The initiative comes as the City is considering reducing capacity at the 16th & Newton bridge shelter, a 326-bed shelter owned and provided for City use for free by the Lucky Duck Foundation. This follows the elimination of nearly 500 shelter beds since 2023, including the premature closure last year of the 150-bed Rosecrans bridge shelter, which is also owned and was donated by LDF. These numbers come from a new data dashboard created by the Homelessness Hub at UC San Diego that shows regional emergency shelter capacity for all of San Diego County. Data for the dashboard comes from the Regional Task Force on Homelessness Housing Inventory Count and information published by area city governments that fund regional shelters.

“San Diego cannot meaningfully reduce unsheltered homelessness while simultaneously reducing the number of shelter beds,” said Drew Moser, CEO of the Lucky Duck Foundation. “At a time when 9 out of 10 requests for shelter go unfulfilled, shelter capacity should be expanded, not reduced. The City cannot continue reducing shelter inventory if it is serious about reducing homelessness. Because we know the City is facing significant budget challenges, we are offering to help ensure shelter capacity does not decrease again.”

While the inventory does not include safe parking spaces or individual tents the City operates near Balboa Park, this new shelter inventory is intended to establish a clear baseline: shelter beds across San Diego County should only increase from its current levels. The Lucky Duck Foundation will publicly track shelter inventory countywide and in every city moving forward to ensure transparency, accountability, and a continued focus on adding immediate pathways off the streets. 

The announcement follows a proposal from the City of San Diego to reduce capacity at the 16th & Newton bridge shelter, a 326-bed facility owned by the Lucky Duck Foundation that has served more than 7,900 unique individuals since opening in 2017 and helped well over 1,000 people exit to permanent housing. Because flooding concerns have been cited as justification for reducing capacity and potentially shuttering or relocating the shelter in 2027, LDF is prepared to invest its private philanthropic resources to implement a flood prevention strategy expected to cost several hundred thousand dollars.

The Foundation noted that the public cost of unsheltered homelessness is widely estimated to exceed $42,000 per person annually when accounting for emergency response, healthcare, sanitation, and public safety impacts.

“If the City believes it can add shelter inventory elsewhere as they are proposing, that is terrific,” Moser said. “But adding beds in one location should not come at the expense of eliminating beds elsewhere. San Diego needs more shelter inventory, not less. If the public agrees, we encourage them to contact Mayor Gloria and City Council.”

The following are quotes from other homeless organizations, shelter operators and partners supporting the expansion of shelter bed capacity:

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ACT NOW!

Urge City Council not to Reduce Shelter Capacity at a time when 9 in 10 requests for shelter go unfulfilled

Makayla Scott

Peer Mentor, Promises2Kids
 
As an African American first-generation college graduate, I recently earned my Bachelor’s degree in Urban Planning Management and Design. Despite facing the challenges of homelessness and balancing motherhood, I have persevered and am committed to using my experiences to advocate for better urban planning and support for vulnerable communities.”