The Mercury News

California’s homeless student numbers skyrocket

Report says pandemic and cost of living are big factors in the recent increase of nearly 50%

- Sy aarolyn Jones EdSource

California’s escalating cost of living has led to a 48% surge in the state’s homeless student population over the past decade, according to a new study released Tuesday by researcher­s at UCLA.

Almost 270,000 students in K-12 schools lacked stable housing in 2018-19, numbers that almost certainly have grown since the pandemic and economic downturn began last spring, researcher­s said.

“We knew the numbers would be up, but we were surprised at the scope and severity of the crisis,” said Joseph Bishop, director of UCLA’s Center for the Transforma­tion of Schools, which compiled the report. “Looking at these numbers was really a ‘wow’ moment.”

Disproport­ionate numbers of California’s homeless students were Latino and Black: 70% and 9%, respective­ly. Latinos make up 55% of the overall student enrollment, and Black students 5.3%.

The federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act requires that every public school count the number of students who are living on the street, in shelters, in motels, in cars, doubled-up with other families or moving between friends and relatives’ homes. Using data collected by the California Department of Education, the UCLA researcher­s interviewe­d more than 150 teachers, students, school administra­tors and advocates to get a fuller picture of who’s homeless, how schools are impacted, and what’s driving the increase in numbers.

Describing a “tidal wave of factors,” Bishop cited the skyrocketi­ng cost of housing in many parts of California, widespread economic instabilit­y, a jump in day-to- day living exliUaATIO­N

penses and over-burdened social services such as lowcost mental health counseling or access to affordable housing.

He also noted the grinding poverty that some families find hard to escape, especially when contending with family sickness or other setbacks.

The federal government gives money to schools to provide services for homeless students, such as backpacks or transporta­tion to and from school. Some schools use the money to help entire families, by providing groceries, laundry facilities, showers or connection­s to local nonprofits that can help secure housing or jobs.

But the funding, which has not increased under the Trump Administra­tion, is grossly inadequate, Bishop said. In California, the state distribute­s about $10 million annually through a competitiv­e grant process, which means many districts that apply do not receive money at all. About two- thirds of the state’s homeless students were enrolled in those districts in 2018-19, meaning about 178,000 homeless students received few, if any, services through their schools, according to the report.

Some schools use money set aside for low-income students or foster youth to provide homeless services, but it’s nowhere near enough to cover the escalating needs, said Debbie Raucher, a project director at John Burton Advocates for Youth, which focuses on foster and homeless youth in California.

“Having a roof over your head, having a safe place to sleep and study, is fundamenta­l to absolutely everything,” she said, noting that students who experience homelessne­ss have higher dropout rates and are more likely to experience homelessne­ss as adults. “Investing in these students pays off in so many ways. It’s a cliché, but it really is an investment in our future.”

The crisis has become so severe that schools cannot be expected to solve the problem single-handedly, Bishop and others said. Social service agencies, early childhood education programs, colleges and other organizati­ons need to create a cohesive approach to helping homeless young people stay in school and helping their families find stable housing, the report recommende­d.

Schools also need more staff dedicated to identifyin­g homeless students and pairing them with services. In most districts, only one person — the homeless liaison — is responsibl­e for counting homeless students, applying for funding and working directly with families, often at multiple school campuses.

Jevon Wilkes, executive director of the nonprofit California Advocates for Youth, said schools need to work closely with MediCal and other government agencies to coordinate services and take advantage of existing funding sources. For example, schools could bring Medi- Cal- f unded mental health counselors to work directly on school campuses.

So, even though schools cannot solve the homeless crisis on their own, they play a crucial role in reaching students and families, he said. Schools are trusted, safe places for young people, and are a logical place to reach students who need help. Homeless himself as a teenager, he credited a school psychologi­st with finding him a safe place to sleep and ultimately graduate from high school.

“My life was saved because someone at the school asked me what was going on, and did something,” he said. “We need our schools to have the resources to help every student who needs it. There’s a lot at stake.”

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