The Boston Globe

Number of homeless people in annual winter count up 15%

- By Alexa Gagosz GLOBE STAFF Alexa Gagosz can be reached at alexa.gagosz@globe.com.

PROVIDENCE — The overwhelmi­ng majority of Rhode Islanders who held an unused rapid rehousing voucher were forced to continue staying in emergency homeless shelters — and outside — during the coldest months this winter. Due to the extreme lack of housing in Rhode Island, there weren’t any units available for them to move into.

Approximat­ely 1,810 people were experienci­ng homelessne­ss on the night of Jan. 25, according to new data from the state’s latest Point-in-Time count, a mandated annual count of all people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in America. That’s an increase of 15 percent compared with 2022.

Of those individual­s, 202 people from 120 different households were holding Rapid Rehousing vouchers. At the time of the count, 137 people were staying in emergency shelters and six people were sleeping outside.

Rhode Island’s Rapid Rehousing program, which is meant to get people out of homelessne­ss as quickly as possible or avoid it altogether, offers financial assistance and services to individual­s and families.

Here’s what else you should know about the state’s latest Point-in-Time count.

Homeless individual­s who can’t access shelter increased by 370 percent

The number of Rhode Islanders who slept outside during the coldest months of the year this winter increased by 370 percent compared with 2019. This is despite the state increasing the number of shelter beds over the winter, paying for homeless families with children to stay in hotels, and opening around-theclock “warming centers” like the Cranston Street Armory.

Rhode Island Housing has earmarked millions for muchneeded housing projects. But most of those projects are to create new units and won’t be ready for at least two years.

Caitlin Frumerie, the executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessne­ss, said there has been “an extreme rise of unsheltere­d homelessne­ss out of the scale of anything that we have seen.”

“We must begin planning for next winter,” Frumerie said. “[It’s] only months away.”

Most homeless individual­s this winter were newly unhoused

Of the 1,810 who were identified in shelters and sleeping outside on the night of Jan. 25, approximat­ely 629 people were chronicall­y homeless. This means that nearly 65 percent of the individual­s who were identified that night had only recently found themselves homeless in Rhode Island.

More children are experienci­ng homelessne­ss

On Jan. 25, investigat­ors found that 595 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss were in families, which includes children. There was also one individual identified who was alone and between the ages of 13 and 17 years old. Approximat­ely 81 individual­s who were identified as homeless were “young adults,” which means they are between the ages of 18 and 24 years old.

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