Albuquerque Journal

Annual count shows city’s homeless numbers up

This year’s survey includes people in shelters and sleeping outside

- BY RICK NATHANSON JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

There are at least 200 more homeless people in Albuquerqu­e than there were two years ago — and those are only the ones who could be located.

The increase is reported in the findings of the recently released Point-InTime count, which provides a yearly snapshot of the homeless population.

According to the Point-In-Time, or PIT, count, 1,524 sheltered and unsheltere­d homeless people were counted — 206 more than the 2017 PIT count that recorded 1,318 homeless people in the city limits.

The New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessne­ss is contracted by the city to conduct the annual count. In evennumber­ed years, only homeless people who stay in shelters are counted; in odd

numbered years, a more comprehens­ive count is conducted to also include people sleeping in cars, outside in parks, beneath underpasse­s, “wherever you can find them,” said Lisa Huval, deputy director for housing and homelessne­ss in the city’s Department of Family and Community Services.

The PIT report indicates that most people experienci­ng unsheltere­d homelessne­ss in Albuquerqu­e were residents of Albuquerqu­e before becoming homeless.

The PIT count, which is done in communitie­s across the country, is the official number of homeless reported by those communitie­s to the federal Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t. HUD uses that data “to show Congress the need to invest in homeless programs and to help understand the scope of the problem at the local, state, regional and national levels,” she said.

Although there is no definitive answer for why the number of homeless has risen, Huval thinks it may be partly because the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessne­ss is getting better each year at locating and counting unsheltere­d homeless people.

Anecdotall­y, people who keep track of the homeless population believe there are more homeless encampment­s than in previous years, “which would suggest there’s an increasing number of folks who are sleeping outside,” Huval said. That, in turn, may be a reflection of the opioid epidemic affecting communitie­s across the country, including Albuquerqu­e.

“Often, substance abuse makes it difficult for people to access shelters, or makes them unwilling to access shelters, so they prefer to sleep outside,” she said.

Although the PIT count shows the number of homeless has risen, “we know it’s an undercount, because it’s really hard to find people who are living outside, particular­ly if they don’t want to be found,” she said.

Also, the PIT count represents the number of homeless people who were surveyed on one particular night — in this case Jan. 28, 2019 — rather than the number who are homeless over the course of a year or a school year. “It’s a snapshot taken on one night,” Huval said.

The count requires that the HUD definition of “homelessne­ss” be used. “So we’re only counting people who are sleeping in a shelter, in a transition­al housing program, or outside” in places not meant for human habitation, Huval said. “We are not counting people who don’t want to participat­e in the PIT survey, or who are sleeping in motels that they pay for themselves, or who are doubled up with family or friends.”

The bigger homelessne­ss picture is captured by local homeless service providers, Albuquerqu­e Public Schools and a city computer system that tracks supportive housing openings.

According to Danny Whatley, executive director of the Rock At Noon Day, which offers meals and other services to the homeless, there are 4,000 to 4,500 homeless people in the Albuquerqu­e area, with the fastestgro­wing segments being millennial­s and seniors.

APS spokeswoma­n Monica Armenta said the number of homeless kids enrolled in district schools, meaning kids from families that have no permanent address, has consistent­ly ranged from 3,200 to 3,500.

The Coordinate­d Entry System, a centralize­d citywide system that the city uses to track and fill supportive housing openings when they become available, shows that about 5,000 households experience­d homelessne­ss last year.

Albuquerqu­e currently spends about $8 million a year to provide 775 vouchers for rental assistance and move homeless people from the street into housing. An additional $2 million is being added to the fund this year, which will allow another 125 to 150 people to get into housing.

In an attempt to accommodat­e another large portion of the homeless population, those who welcome nightly shelter, the city’s West Side Emergency Housing Center, a converted jail about 20 miles west of Downtown, has up to 450 beds available. The shelter is now open year-round from 5 p.m. to 9 a.m. Monday through Friday, and 24 hours on Saturday and Sunday.

Shuttle buses pick up and drop off homeless people from two locations in the city. The yearly operating cost of the facility is about $4.4 million, one-fourth of which is transporta­tion costs, Huval said.

In the November election, the city will ask voters to approve $14 million in general obligation bonds for the constructi­on of a new, more centrally located homeless shelter that will be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

That’s part of a long-term strategy to close the West Side shelter, which Huval said “is not sustainabl­e, given the amount we’re spending on transporta­tion, and it will never really achieve our vision of being a hub to connect people to services because of its location.”

Ultimately, the goal is to move people from the streets into permanent housing. A shelter is an intermedia­te but necessary facility.

“If we’re not thinking about the housing issue parallel to the shelter issue, we’re just creating a place where folks are going to get stuck,” she said.

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Two homeless men at an encampment near Tramway NE and Interstate 40 read a pamphlet about local shelters that was handed to them earlier this month during an outreach effort by Health Care for the Homeless.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Two homeless men at an encampment near Tramway NE and Interstate 40 read a pamphlet about local shelters that was handed to them earlier this month during an outreach effort by Health Care for the Homeless.
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 ?? RICK NATHANSON/JOURNAL ?? Lisa Huval, the city’s deputy director for housing and homelessne­ss, talks about the recently released Point-In-Time count, showing an increase in the number of homeless people.
RICK NATHANSON/JOURNAL Lisa Huval, the city’s deputy director for housing and homelessne­ss, talks about the recently released Point-In-Time count, showing an increase in the number of homeless people.
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