San Diego County Annual Report Shows We Are Better Together

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The County of San Diego released an Annual Report Monday that listed numerous accomplishments and stated that the County, the public it serves, local cities, community groups and organizations are better when they work together.

“In San Diego County we are better together,” County Chief Administrative Officer Helen Robbins-Meyer stated in the report. “This collective dedication to strengthening San Diego County has led us to take on the region’s most pressing issues together. From affordable housing and climate change to sustainability, public and behavioral health, justice reform and homelessness, our collaboration and your input are at the critical center of any success.”

The Annual Report provides a snapshot of what the County has accomplished in the past year and the goals it hopes to attain. And it cited numerous achievements.

The County added more funding to the millions of dollars it had already spent to add new affordable housing and working with cities to break ground on new projects. It found new ways to challenge homelessness, like creating Safe Parking sites and launching a pilot Shallow Subsidy program to pay subsidies to keep older adults in their homes. It improved emergency medical services in rural areas and continued to add firefighting resources to protect San Diegans.

It continued to improve behavioral health by expanding Mobile Crisis Response Teams and Crisis Stabilization Units. And it continued to act to improve justice reform. It increased alternatives to incarceration through substance use disorder programs and job training. And it built a “One Safe Place” justice center in North County for survivors of abuse and trauma, with plans to build another in South County in the coming year.

The County of San Diego provides services and programs that touch the lives of nearly every person in the region.

Some of those include law enforcement through the Sheriff’s Department, health and social services, public health services, and land use in the unincorporated areas. The County also runs elections regionwide, monitors beach water quality and operates County parks and 33 public libraries.

The Annual Report broke the County’s accomplishments and goals into six categories. Those were: Healthy and Safe Communities; Homelessness and Affordable Housing; Investing in Working Families; Justice Reform; Mental Health and Substance Use Support; and Sustainability and Addressing Climate Change.

Other highlights from the Annual Report include:

To see the full Annual Report, go to the County’s Annual Report webpage.

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