Oakland has received almost $5 million in federal funds to provide housing and support for its homeless.

“On any given night more than 1,300 people in our city are unsheltered,” Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf in a written statement.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development renewed five Oakland grants and awarded a new one earlier this month.

The new $1 million grant will provide rapid rehousing services to 60 homeless young people in Oakland, Berkeley, Emeryville and Albany. The youth must be 16 to 25 years old and no longer in foster care or state custody.

Services will include outreach, shelter, transitional housing and permanent housing. The project is a partnership of the city, East Oakland Community Project, First Place for Youth and Covenant House and YEAH!

The five renewed grants include:

$1.9 million to Housing Fast Support Network. The 137-bed program provides housing of four to six months for 280 single adults each year. Last year, 67 percent of its clients found permanent housing.

$200,000 to Families in Transition. The money goes toward interim housing in nine units throughout Oakland, with an average stay of 11 months. In 2015, the program aided 14 families, with 81 percent moving to permanent housing.

$265,000 to Matilda Cleveland. The 32-bed center offers shared housing for 14 homeless families at a time, or 30 families over the course of a year. The average length of stay is eight months, and 85 percent were placed in permanent housing last year.

$713,000 to Oakland Homeless Youth Housing Collaborative. Three Oakland agencies provide case management and transitional housing to 70 young people annually. Last year, 65 percent of its clients then went to permanent housing.