Every time somebody goes to a county courthouse anywhere in Washington to record a real estate transaction, a document recording fee is charged. By law, $40 of that money is dedicated to homeless services.
That fee has made a huge difference in reducing homelessness across the state and locally, according to Andy Silver, the executive director of Clark County’s Council for the Homeless. It adds up to $42 million statewide and $3.4 million a year in Clark County, he said, and the money pays for a wide variety of services that help to get or keep families off the street.
“Really it’s the primary funding source we have for homeless services,” Silver said. “It goes to pay for emergency shelters, rental assistance to keep people in housing and avoid homelessness, transitional housing and supportive services for people who have been homeless.”
But the document recording fee, which became law in 2006, is scheduled to end in 2015. The impact of that change will be gradual, Silver said, but by 2017 there would be an overall 60 percent drop in homeless funding statewide and a loss of $2 million in Clark County.