Las Vegas Review-Journal

Homeless up in Bay Area, down in San Francisco

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SAN FRANCISCO — Homelessne­ss increased nearly 9 percent in the San Francisco Bay Area over the last three years, despite hundreds of millions of dollars spent to keep people off the streets during the coronaviru­s pandemic, preliminar­y numbers released Monday show. San Francisco appeared to be the one bright spot, seeing homelessne­ss decline slightly.

Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, reported a 22 percent increase in this year’s pointin-time survey, while neighborin­g Contra Costa County saw a 35 percent jump in people spotted living in shelters, vehicles or outdoors. The largest county in the region, Santa Clara, reported a 3 percent increase from 2019, including an 11 percent increase in the city of San Jose.

San Francisco reported a 3.5 percent decline to nearly 7,800 homeless residents, which housing advocates chalked up in part to a wealth tax approved by voters in 2018.

In total, seven of the Bay Area’s nine counties reported counting more than 35,000 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in late February. The count is required every other year by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and helps determine funding. San Mateo and Solano counties did not report preliminar­y numbers Monday.

Housing advocates said increases across the region would have been worse without strong and speedy interventi­on from the state and local government.

San Francisco has often served as the poster city for homelessne­ss given the high visibility of tent encampment­s. But preliminar­y figures show a 15 percent decrease in people who are living unsheltere­d outdoors and an 11 percent decline in its chronicall­y homeless single adult population.

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