The Reporter (Vacaville)

Homelessne­ss up in Bay Area, down slightly

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Homelessne­ss increased nearly 9% 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 Oakland, reported a 22% increase in this year's point-in-time survey, while neighborin­g Contra Costa County saw a 35% jump in people spotted living in shelters, vehicles or outdoors.

The largest county in the region, Santa Clara, reported a 3% increase from 2019, including an 11% increase in San Jose.

San Francisco reported a 3.5% 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. California Gov. Gavin Newsom made money available at the start of the pandemic to house homeless residents in hotels and eviction moratorium­s helped keep people in their homes.

The San Francisco Bay Area “staved off a catastroph­ic increase in homelessne­ss” over the last three years, said regional housing advocacy group group All Home in a statement released Monday. The 2021 count was canceled due to the pandemic and this year's count was conducted in late February.

“Bay Area government­s and nonprofits played deep defense on homelessne­ss during the pandemic and we have more or less held the line — but now we need to go on offense and end the suffering on our streets” said Tomiquia Moss, the nonprofit group's founder and CEO.

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

Officials involved with the count in Alameda County said at a news conference Monday that much of the overall increase was driven by a nearly 40% rise in people living in vehicles, including cars and RVs, and a 53% increase in people enrolled in shelter programs.

They also said that its 22% increase over three years was a slower rate than the 20% annual increases it had been seeing.

“We consider this to be a huge success and a direct reflection of the additional resources that were infused into our system,” said Chelsea Andrews, executive director of EveryOne Home, which helped conducted the count.

 ?? SCOTT STRAZZANTE — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP, FILE ?? San Francisco police officers wake up a sleeping homeless man to ask him to move along Eddy Street near the Jefferson Hotel in San Francisco.
SCOTT STRAZZANTE — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP, FILE San Francisco police officers wake up a sleeping homeless man to ask him to move along Eddy Street near the Jefferson Hotel in San Francisco.

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