The Homelessness and Behavioral Health Select Committee voted Sept. 22 to forward to the full Board a resolution approving a permanent loan agreement of approximately $47.4 million to pay off interim financing for 440 Geary (the Hotel Diva), a Homekey conversion that provides 122 residential units.
Sophie Rubin, a project manager in the mayor's office of housing and community development (MOHCD), described the project history: the site was used as a shelter-in-place hotel during the COVID-19 emergency, the city and Episcopal Community Services (ECS) applied for Homekey funds in 2020, the Homekey award was granted, and the city closed on the purchase in December 2020. A structural engineer later identified the need for more extensive seismic and code upgrades, prompting HSH and MOHCD to commit additional interim financing to upsize the loan; the permanent loan now before the committee would replace that interim financing.
Project details presented to the committee: 122 units (121 permanent supportive housing units, 1 manager unit), units restricted at 50% MOHCD AMI and subject to a 30% AMI state restriction tied to Homekey funds; two ground-floor commercial spaces (one leased to Starbucks until 2027). Rubin said the permanent loan must close quickly because the interim financing expires at the end of the month; the rehabilitation finished in August 2023.
The Budget and Legislative Analyst (Nick Menard) questioned the scope of due diligence and flagged that roughly $20 million more was spent than board members were told in 2020 because of the unanticipated rehabilitation scope, calling it a missed opportunity to use those funds elsewhere. MOHCD and HSH staff responded that the Homekey procurement and pandemic-era timelines curtailed standard due diligence and that the housing accelerator fund enabled rapid acquisition to preserve units during an emergency.
ECS said the property's service model budgets six full-time services staff (four case managers, one assistant site manager, one site manager) with 24/7 coverage; ECS acknowledged two vacant case manager positions in recruitment. Supervisors asked about resident needs and service levels; HSH and ECS explained higher levels of clinical and wraparound services are planned for 100% PSH buildings.
After public comment none were on the call and no in-chamber callers spoke, the committee voted unanimously to forward the loan agreement to the Board as a committee report (Mandelmann, Walton, Ronan voting aye).