Homelessness in Santa Barbara County
Everyone agrees it's a crisis. Nobody agrees whose budget it's on.
Homelessness sits at the intersection of every other issue in Santa Barbara County — housing costs, behavioral health, public safety, and the visible decline of State Street. The annual point-in-time count puts the number in the thousands, spread across the South Coast and North County, and the response is split among the county, the cities, and a web of nonprofit service providers.
That fragmentation is the politics. The county runs behavioral health and much of the safety-net funding; cities control encampment enforcement and a lot of the visible street response; service agencies run the shelters and outreach. When something goes wrong, each can point at the others. Meanwhile downtown businesses, neighbors, and unhoused residents all live with the result.
This hub maps who holds which lever, where the strain concentrates, and the elections and budgets that decide how the county responds.
What's at Stake
- Shelter & interim housing beds
- Behavioral health & treatment
- Encampment policy
- State Street & downtown
- County–city coordination
Who Decides
Where It's Hottest
Frequently Asked
How many people are homeless in Santa Barbara County?
The annual point-in-time count, coordinated through the county's Continuum of Care, has consistently found thousands of people experiencing homelessness countywide; exact figures vary year to year.
Who is responsible for homelessness response?
Responsibility is shared: the county handles behavioral health and much safety-net funding, cities handle local enforcement and street response, and nonprofit providers run shelters and outreach.