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San Juan County details housing gains and funding plans as state law will change how homelessness is counted
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Summary
SAN JUAN COUNTY, Wash. — At the San Juan County Board of Health meeting on May 21, Housing Program Coordinator Ryan Page described recent affordable-housing developments, how county housing dollars have been used, and an upcoming legal change that will transfer responsibility for the “point‑in‑time” homelessness census to the Washington Department of Commerce.
SAN JUAN COUNTY, Wash. — At the San Juan County Board of Health meeting on May 21, Housing Program Coordinator Ryan Page described recent affordable-housing developments, how county housing dollars have been used, and an upcoming legal change that will transfer responsibility for the “point‑in‑time” homelessness census to the Washington Department of Commerce.
Page told the board that the county’s HOME and related housing funds have supported 196 housing units either completed or in development and that the county has committed roughly $13 million to 13 projects so far. He also summarized rental‑assistance programs and warned that a new state law will change how the county measures homelessness.
The changes matter because local planning, service delivery and funding rounds rely on the count and on the county’s current funding pipeline, Page said. “The 2025 point‑in‑time count we were able to identify a 124 individuals that were either considered homeless or at risk of homelessness,” he told the board, and then flagged Substitute House Bill 1899 as the driver of a new state approach to the survey.
Page outlined immediate program details first. He said the county’s senior and disabled rental‑subsidy program currently supports 22 clients across four apartment complexes. Page described an emergency rental‑assistance pilot begun in 2024 that “served over 75 individuals … averaging less than $600 per subsidy,” and he said the county budgeted $105,000 for rental assistance in the current year.
On capital and program funds, Page said the county has generated more than $15 million into its housing funds and has committed about $13 million to projects that together leverage roughly $80 million in total development costs. He said $2.7 million is available in the 2025
