The Oklahoman

‘WE’RE NOT JUST COUNTING PEOPLE’

OKC homeless census to provide important informatio­n, serves many purposes

- Carla Hinton

The woman carried a plastic storage tub as she walked along the side of an Oklahoma City highway in freezing temperatur­es about 4:15 a.m. Thursday. ● She was on her way home – to a tent tucked deep within the trees near a creek off the side of the road. ● Lt. David Dale, Oklahoma City Police Department’s homeless outreach team supervisor, spoke to her first on Thursday during the 2023 Point in Time census and survey of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss. Then Point in Time team members Alex McGowan-Rayburn and Karen Martinez struck up a conversati­on with the woman and learned that she began abusing drugs shortly after her father died.

“She said she just stopped caring,” McGowan-Rayburn said.

Homeless Alliance Executive Director Dan Straughan said the informatio­n gleaned during such visits serves several purposes. He said the census and survey organized by the city of Oklahoma City and the Homeless Alliance is required at least once every two years of communitie­s that receive U.S. Department of

Housing and Urban Developmen­t funding. Oklahoma City typically conducts its survey each year.

Straughan said the Point in Time is more than a population count. He said the “good data” from the survey also informs local service agencies who help people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

‘We’re asking the questions ‘What was it that caused your homelessne­ss? What services did you need to prevent your homelessne­ss that you weren’t able to access or what services do you need right now to get back into housing?’” Dan Straughan, Homeless Alliance Executive Director

“We’re not just counting people, we’re asking the questions ‘What was it that caused your homelessne­ss? What services did you need to prevent your homelessne­ss that you weren’t able to access or what services do you need right now to get back into housing?’” Straughan said. “Then we, as a community, can use that informatio­n to develop new programs, to make current programs bigger, and to address gaps in services in the community.”

That was why 19 teams made up of people from various homeless service providers spread out into the city on Thursday to visit places like shelters, encampment­s, meal programs, libraries, churches talk to people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Cale Powers, Veterans Affairs homeless coordinato­r, led the team that included Dale, McGowan-Rayburn, Karen Martinez and several others. The group spent about an hour and a half in the area where they met the first woman Thursday morning. Powers and Dale found a man sleeping in a tent not too far from where the woman lived. Powers said the man told him that he’d been homeless for about 10 years and he’d been living near the creek for about a year.

Not too far away, the group encountere­d a woman and two men sleeping in a van. Clipboard in hand, Powers and McGowan-Rayburn spoke to the three and learned that the woman avoided shelters because they made her anxious. The group parked the van and slept in it rather than going to a shelter, despite the cold.

Powers said he gave the three bus passes, fast food gift cards and some dog treats for their pet pit bull terrier.

“You come across people, and it made me aware that many of us are just two or three unlucky circumstan­ces away from being homeless,” Powers said.

A look at the numbers

The 2022 Point in Time survey found 1,339 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in Oklahoma City on the day of the count in 2022. This was a decrease of 234 people from the previous count, but Straughan said this didn’t mean homelessne­ss had decreased. He said he thinks last year’s count was lower than the year before because it was conducted during icy weather in March, when many people likely sought refuge at local shelters. Also, he said COVID-19 case numbers were up at that time.

Results of the 2023 count will be compiled, analyzed and released later this year, and Straughan said he thinks they will show there has been an increase in people experienci­ng homelessne­ss compared to 2022.

“I could be wrong, but we saw from recent data that Oklahoma City had the fastest-rising rent of any large city in the country,” he said. “And then we’ve seen eviction court dockets set records since March of last year. Not all of those people become homeless, but some of them do, and that drives our numbers.”

Straughan said he was pleased to learn that most people agreed to share their informatio­n when approached by the teams.

“This is my 17th Point in Time, and I’m continuall­y surprised by that,” he said. “I mean, you’re waking people up at 4 o’clock in the morning to take a fairly lengthy survey in return for a bus pass, and people are very willing to do that for you. It reinforces the idea that they’re not homeless people – homelessne­ss doesn’t define them. They’re just people – brothers and sisters, moms and dads, sons and daughters – that are in a temporary rough patch, and they behave pretty much like you and I do.”

 ?? BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Alex McGowan Rayburn, center, and Karen Martinez, left, speak to a person Thursday in northwest Oklahoma City during the Homeless Alliance’s 2023 Point in Time count of the homeless population.
BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN Alex McGowan Rayburn, center, and Karen Martinez, left, speak to a person Thursday in northwest Oklahoma City during the Homeless Alliance’s 2023 Point in Time count of the homeless population.
 ?? BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Cale Powers leaves a note with a person Thursday outside a store in northwest Oklahoma City during the Homeless Alliance’s 2023 Point in Time count of the homeless population.
BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN Cale Powers leaves a note with a person Thursday outside a store in northwest Oklahoma City during the Homeless Alliance’s 2023 Point in Time count of the homeless population.

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