San Francisco Chronicle

Disturbing data could get worse

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The latest federal census of the unhoused population confirms the troubling extent to which America’s homelessne­ss problem is California’s homelessne­ss problem. It also attests to the state’s abject failure to address a humanitari­an crisis that may have grown even worse since the count was conducted on the brink of the pandemic.

From 2019 to 2020, California’s homeless population grew by over 10,000 to more than 161,000, according to newly released data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t. Based on regional, socalled pointintim­e counts of homeless people in shelters and on the streets in January 2020, HUD found that the number of homeless people nationwide had increased by over 12,000, meaning California alone accounted for about 80% of national growth.

The proportion­ate annual increase in California homelessne­ss, nearly 7%, was triple the national rate and ranked among the top 10 states. The absolute increase, 10,270, dwarfed all others; the next largest, that of Texas, was 1,381.

Over the preceding five years, while national homelessne­ss rose less than 3%, California’s surged by about 40%.

While California is the nation’s most populous state, home to nearly 1 in 8 Americans, the latest census shows it accounts for an increasing­ly disproport­ionate share of homeless Americans — more than 1 in 4. Worse, California claimed about 40% of those deemed chronicall­y homeless and over half the nation’s unsheltere­d — those living on the streets and in vehicles instead of in shelters or other transition­al accommodat­ions.

While the majority of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss nationwide were in shelters, the opposite was true in California, where about 70% are on the streets, a greater share than in any other state. New York, one of only two states with marginally higher homelessne­ss per capita, sheltered 95% of its homeless population.

HUD also found that the Bay Area, along with Los Angeles, was among the regions with the largest concentrat­ions of homeless people and the highest shares who were unsheltere­d. The San Jose and Oakland areas both ranked among the top five major urban areas on both scores, as did Santa Rosa among smaller cities.

The figures are disturbing enough on their own but more so given that they don’t account for the subsequent economic devastatio­n of the pandemic. Eviction moratorium­s and emergency housing may have mitigated the harm but won’t in perpetuity. Moreover, while the pointintim­e estimate is the only official census of homelessne­ss, it’s widely suspected of undercount­ing.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Leg

islature presided over the worsening of this crisis in good times, largely failing to address one of the worst housing shortages in the nation and ignoring the key recommenda­tion of a homelessne­ss task force, a right to shelter. The result is predictabl­e and appalling.

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? A homeless man about to receive a coronaviru­s vaccine from a mobile clinic in Martinez on Monday.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle A homeless man about to receive a coronaviru­s vaccine from a mobile clinic in Martinez on Monday.

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