The US has experienced a dramatic 12 percent increase in homelessness to its highest reported level as soaring rents and a decline in COVID-19-pandemic assistance combined to put housing out of reach for more Americans, federal officials said on Friday.
About 653,000 people were homeless, the most since the country began using the yearly point-in-time survey in 2007. The total in the January count represents an increase of about 70,650 from a year earlier.
The latest estimate indicates that people becoming homeless for the first time were behind much of the increase.
Photo: AP
A rise in family homelessness ended a downward trend that began in 2012.
“For those on the front lines of this crisis, it’s not surprising,” said Ann Oliva, chief executive officer at the advocacy group National Alliance to End Homelessness.
US Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Marcia Fudge said the data underscored an “urgent need” to support proven solutions that help people quickly exit homelessness and that prevent homelessness in the first place.
Going back to the first 2007 survey, the US then made steady progress for about a decade in reducing the homeless population as the government focused particularly on increasing investments to get veterans into housing. The number of homeless people dropped from about 637,000 in 2010 to about 554,000 in 2017.
The numbers ticked up to about 580,000 in the 2020 count and held relatively steady over the next two years as the US Congress responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with emergency rental assistance, stimulus payments, aid to states and local governments and a temporary eviction moratorium.
US Interagency Council on Homelessness Director Jeff Olivet said the extra assistance “held off the rise in homelessness that we are now seeing.”
Numerous factors are behind the problem, he said.
“The most significant causes are the shortage of affordable homes and the high cost of housing that have left many Americans living paycheck to paycheck and one crisis away from homelessness,” Olivet said.
Within the overall rise, homelessness among individuals rose by nearly 11 percent, among veterans by 7.4 percent and among families with children by 15.5 percent.
People who identify as black make up about 13 percent of the US population, but comprised 37 percent of all people experiencing homelessness, the survey showed.
People who identify as Hispanic or Latino make up about 19 percent of the population, but comprised about 33 percent of those experiencing homelessness. More than one-quarter of the adults experiencing homelessness were older than 54.
HUD said that rental housing conditions were “extraordinarily challenging” last year, with rents increasing at more than twice the rate of the past few years.
That trend has subsided since the January count, it added.
Such relief could show benefits when volunteers and housing officials around the country begin the next homeless count in just a few weeks.
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