The number of homeless shelter beds in Tacoma could drop significantly next summer if the city doesn’t secure new state funding.
The city’s temporary and emergency homeless shelters depend on federal pandemic relief money, which will dry up at the end of 2024. The state Department of Commerce’s $3 million grant allowed Tacoma to keep the shelters running until June 2025, but the state has not identified funding to keep them open after that date.
Tacoma currently funds five emergency shelters with a combined 367 beds. But in a news release this week, the city said it faces the “difficult decision” of closing most of those shelters in June 2025 because of the shortfall. Under the current plan , only one emergency shelter is slated to remain open past June: Stability Site, a 100-person shelter operated by Catholic Community Services.
The city also funds three temporary shelters – shelters managed by local nonprofits and faith-based groups on a short-term basis – with a combined 112 beds. Two were already going to close this year as part of a broader shift in strategy, said city spokesperson Maria Lee. The third, Bethlehem Baptist Church, will close in June if the city does not find additional funding.