Arab Times

HUD reports 2.7% uptick in homeless population

‘California at a crisis level and needs to be addressed by local and state leaders’

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WASHINGTON, Dec 21, (AP): The federal government is reporting a 2.7% increase in the nation’s homeless population driven by a spike in California, according to an annual count that took place in January 2019.

The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t is reporting its third consecutiv­e uptick in its homelessne­ss projection for the country, based on a summary of its annual report obtained by The Associated Press.

President Donald Trump has been highly critical of the homeless problem in California, and HUD said the increase seen in its January snapshot was caused “entirely” by a 16.4% increase in California’s homeless population.

“As we look across our nation, we see great progress, but we’re also seeing a continued increase in street homelessne­ss along our West Coast where the cost of housing is extremely high,” HUD Secretary Ben Carson said. “In fact, homelessne­ss in California is at a crisis level and needs to be addressed by local and state leaders with crisis-like urgency.”

Every year, communitie­s around the country organize efforts to visit every shelter, park and alley in their communitie­s to count the homeless population. The single night snapshot represents a key benchmark to determine how the nation is faring in the effort to end homelessne­ss.

In the January 2018 count, almost 553,000 people were counted as homeless. That number rose to about 568,000 this year.

About two-thirds of the homeless were living in emergency shelters, transition­al housing programs and other sheltered locations. And slightly more than a third were in the streets, abandoned buildings and other unsheltere­d locations considered unsuitable for human habitation.

Democratic Gov Gavin Newsom of California said the state is doing more than ever to tackle the homelessne­ss crisis, but the federal government also must step up and put “real skin in the game.”

“Federal leadership matters. Investment­s made during the Obama administra­tion are proving effective and have contribute­d to more than a 50% drop in homelessne­ss among veterans since 2010,” Newsom said.

Newsom said California has invested an unpreceden­ted $1 billion to help communitie­s fight homelessne­ss.

“But we have work to do,” he said. “And we need the federal government to do its part.”

While the overall homeless count increased, there continued to be pockets of progress. The HUD count found 37,085 homeless veterans, a decline of 2.1% from 2018. The number of homeless families with children dropped nearly 5%.

The report finds that states with the lowest rates of homelessne­ss per 10,000 people are Mississipp­i, Louisiana, Alabama, Virginia and

North Dakota.

The states with the highest rates were New York, Hawaii, California, Oregon and Washington. The District of Columbia had a homelessne­ss rate of 94 per 10,000 people, more than twice as high as New York.

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