The San Francisco Board of Supervisors adopted Resolution No. 230-25 on May 6, 2025, endorsing California Assembly Bill No. 255 (Haney), called the Supportive-Recovery Residence Program, to secure dedicated state funding and establish a certification framework for recovery residences. The resolution notes that Senate Bill 1380, the Housing First Act, passed in 2016 to remove barriers to permanent housing, but identifies an urgent need for recovery-safe living facilities to support those at risk of substance relapse and overdose, particularly due to fentanyl prevalence. AB 255 would prevent relapse from being an automatic eviction cause, requiring certified recovery residences to provide detox and peer-to-peer support, and to rehouse tenants until stability is achieved. The bill also allows disruptive tenants to transition to harm-reduction housing while ensuring ongoing housing security. Tenants may reapply to recovery-focused housing upon renewed commitment to abstinence. AB 255 aligns recovery housing with Housing First by mandating voluntary services and tenant-driven support, certified by DHCS using NARR and SAMHSA standards. The resolution directs the Clerk to forward endorsements to the Governor, legislative leadership, and key legislators. Supervisors emphasized that AB 255 expands core Housing First components and increases state investment in recovery-centric programs. The resolution underscores San Francisco’s support for evidence-based recovery residences that integrate housing stability with long-term sobriety. Adoption affirms the city’s commitment to innovative housing solutions for individuals with substance use disorders.