Los Angeles Times

S.F. homeless count increases

A more thorough tally indicates the problem is worse than the 17% gain reported in May.

- By Benjamin Oreskes

A revised tally shows a grim 30% gain compared with 17% reported in May.

Over the last several months, cities and counties across California have been releasing homeless counts. The results have been grim.

In May,San Francisco released data that showed homelessne­ss had jumped 17%. That was bad enough. Last week, a more complete accounting, known as a point-in-time count, showed the problem was even worse.

The count revealed that homelessne­ss in a city that’s become a caricature of wealth inequality in the U.S. had actually increased by about 30% from 2017, when the last count took place.

The new numbers use a broader definition of what’s considered to be homeless that goes beyond what’s mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t. They include homeless people in jails, hospitals and residentia­l treatment facilities.

That accounts for 1,773 people and, taken with the previously released number of 8,011, the city has about 9,784 homeless residents, according to a report released by the city Friday during the holiday weekend.

City spokesman Jeff Cretan said that San Francisco had been collecting this additional data for years and that the informatio­n helps inform how the city responds to homelessne­ss. Still, it’s the number required by the federal government of every jurisdicti­on that allows a city such as San Francisco to compare homelessne­ss in their backyard with that in neighborin­g counties.

“We’re looking at the HUD numbers because it helps us work in collaborat­ion with other places like Los Angeles or our neighborin­g counties,” Cretan said. “If Los Angeles or Alameda County did it our way, we could do a more direct comparison with those numbers that were released last week.”

San Francisco also considers people who live in the homes of family or friends and families living in singleroom occupancy units as homeless, but they were unable to get a reliable count of those people. The federal government asks only for a tabulation of people who live in shelters and those living in areas where humans wouldn’t normally sleep, such as the street, in a car, or in a train station.

In 2017, this combined number amounted to 7,499 homeless people. The city’s population of homeless veterans dropped 11%, while the number of chronicall­y homeless increased 35% from 2017. The growth of people residing in recreation­al vehicles and campers was a big factor in why the number of sheltered people increased as well

The new numbers reflect the dire situation that’s being seen in California communitie­s even as the state spends millions of dollars to try to slow the growth of homelessne­ss.

In Los Angeles, the pointin-time count released last month found that there are 59,000 homeless people countywide and 36,000 in the city. That count showed a 12% and 16% increase, respective­ly. Unlike San Francisco, Los Angeles’ count didn’t include people in hospitals, jails or residentia­l treatment facilities — places where homeless people frequently find themselves.

Elsewhere in the Bay Area, the number of homeless people living in Santa Clara County jumped 31% over the last two years, from 7,394 to 9,706, according to preliminar­y results released by the county. San Jose saw its homeless count increase by 1,822 people, for a total of 6,172 homeless residents living in the county’s largest city.

In the East Bay’s Alameda County, the numbers weren’t any better, with a 43% increase since 2017. Its homeless population is 8,022, of which 6,312 are unsheltere­d.

Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties all recorded double-digit percent increases in homelessne­ss for 2019.

These point-in-time counts are required by the federal government as a way to assess how funding is distribute­d to battle homelessne­ss. Some cities and counties will then do additional counting in order to have a more complete picture of their homelessne­ss.

 ?? Ben Margot Associated Press ?? A MAN LIES on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. The city that’s become a caricature of wealth inequality in the U.S. has seen a 30% increase in homeless people since the last count in 2017.
Ben Margot Associated Press A MAN LIES on the sidewalk beside a recyclable trash bin in San Francisco. The city that’s become a caricature of wealth inequality in the U.S. has seen a 30% increase in homeless people since the last count in 2017.

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