Hartford Courant

Federal report says homelessne­ss climbed

Connecticu­t had 17.4 percent increase in one-year span; governor’s office cites Hurricane Maria evacuees

- Associated Press

HARTFORD – Connecticu­t experience­d a 17.4 percent increase in homelessne­ss between 2017 and 2018, according to a federal report released Monday.

The U.S. Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s annual assessment to Congress counted the number of homeless on one day in January 2017 and compared the tally to a day in January of this year. It found that 3,976 people experience­d homelessne­ss on the count day this year. Most were in emergency shelters or transition­al housing, while 581 people were unsheltere­d.

But representa­tives for Connecticu­t’s Department of Housing and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said the uptick was mostly due to large numbers of Hurricane Maria evacuees from Puerto Rico, who relocated to the state after the destructiv­e storm.

“While year over year snapshots will go up and down, we should be clear that this year’s report is almost entirely attributab­le to the aftermath of Hurricane Maria,” said Malloy spokesman Leigh Appleby. “Connecticu­t has seen real and substantia­l progress on our efforts to end homelessne­ss.”

Department of Housing spokesman Dan Arsenault noted that the report highlighte­d successes when it comes to combating homelessne­ss in Connecticu­t, a key issue for outgoing Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s administra­tion. There were 190 veterans who experience­d homelessne­ss on this year’s count day, marking a 0.5 percent decline from January 2017. Since 2010, veteran homelessne­ss in Connecticu­t has declined by 60.6 percent.

The report also shows that chronic or long-term homelessne­ss among individual­s in Connecticu­t has decreased 18.8 percent, or by 79 people, since 2017.

On the other hand, the report shows homelessne­ss experience­d by families increased 41 percent. Arsenault said part of that increase can also be attributed to the influx of evacuees from Puerto Rico. But he said the administra­tion realizes there’s a need and has stepped up efforts to help families find homes.

Last week, Malloy announced the state and its nonprofit partners had matched 280 families, including 548 children and 438 adults, with housing during the last three months. It’s part of the Governor’s Challenge on Family Homelessne­ss, a campaign that was launched in September to house as many homeless families as possible.

“I amconfiden­t that if our state continues these efforts,” Malloy said, “we can reach our goal of bringing an end to youth and family homelessne­ss by the end of 2020.”

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