The Signal

Homeless task force discusses 2020 count

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer

The Santa Clarita task force on homelessne­ss took its first steps Wednesday toward generating an action plan that could improve how the city tallies its homeless population, ahead of the 2020 point-intime count.

The committee, made up of about 30 community leaders, took recommenda­tions made in May by UCLA graduate students on how to improve the local count and what can be implemente­d immediatel­y by Jan. 21, the scheduled pointin-time count for the region.

“By the conversati­on today, we’ve come up with some ideas in order to be able to more accurately come to a conclusion about the homeless in our city, which is extremely important to get the funding and resources that we need,” said Mayor Marsha McLean, a committee member.

Every year, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority organizes in 85 cities and unincorpor­ated areas of the L.A. County a point-in-time count, which is an unduplicat­ed count of sheltered and unsheltere­d individual­s facing homelessne­ss conducted from Jan. 22-24. Results from the homeless count are used to determine the amount of funds each city’s local programs are eligible for in order to receive to combat homelessne­ss.

Santa Clarita has found that the counts from previous years are far below the actual numbers, including that of 2018, which tallied 256 local homeless individual­s.

School officials have stated that the figure falls short of what a single district can count.

To reach a better count, the committee discussed implementi­ng improved volunteer training and establishi­ng teams with a minimum of three people to fill the necessary role of a navigator, driver and recorder. Experience­d team leaders, which could be volunteers or a local organizati­on representa­tive, will also fall into the mix this year.

Under LAHSA’s guidelines, those who tally persons experienci­ng homelessne­ss on the single night are not allowed to exit their vehicle but Santa Clarita may look at partially walking in areas that cannot be adequately seen from a car to ensure that individual­s in more obscure places are enumerated.

Special teams to conduct a count of riverbeds and wilderness areas where people may be residing, as well as conducting the count during daylight hours, such as from 5-10 a.m., to address visibility challenges, are methods the task force agreed it could implement in the future, according to Jerrid

McKenna, assistant to the city manager.

The task force is expected to reconvene once more in before the pointin-time count to tighten up their modified action plan.

 ?? Signal file photo ?? Workers look at a Santa Clarita map ahead of the 2017 point-in-time Homeless Count. A task force is looking to implement improved volunteer training and establishi­ng teams for the 2020 count.
Signal file photo Workers look at a Santa Clarita map ahead of the 2017 point-in-time Homeless Count. A task force is looking to implement improved volunteer training and establishi­ng teams for the 2020 count.

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