Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Where Do People Experience Homelessness?

In efforts to understand and end homelessness, location matters in various ways, including:

1) People experiencing homelessness are increasingly concentrated in cities.

Solving the affordable housing crisis in the nation’s major cities, including ensuring that urban areas have enough deeply affordable housing and emergency housing resources, would significantly reduce homelessness. In 2007, 51 percent of people experiencing homelessness were concentrated in urban areas. In 2023, 59 percent of people experiencing homelessness lived in urban areas.

2) Solving challenges in a few states would significantly reduce homelessness.

Just seven states (California, New York, Florida, Washington, Texas, Oregon, and Massachusetts) account for 63 percent of people experiencing homelessness.

25 Continuums of Care (CoCs), spanning both metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas, account for nearly 49 percent of all people experiencing homelessness. Between 2022 and 2023, homelessness increased the most in these same states and CoCs.

In part, the fact that these regions account for an increasingly large share of the nation’s homeless population is tied to the large overall populations in these states. California’s overall population of people experiencing homelessness increased 5.8 percent in 2023. This is less than half of the average 12.1 percent increase in the national population of people experiencing homelessness. However, due to California’s size, the increased population count was large: 9,878 people.

3) Some smaller states have large numbers relative to their populations.

From 2022 to 2023, homelessness in New Hampshire and New Mexico increased by more than 50 percent. Vermont, Maine, Montana, Colorado, and Alaska have very high rates of people experiencing homelessness compared to their relatively small populations. It is important to ensure that federal resources reach all locations that are uniquely struggling to end homelessness, even if they have small homeless populations. All people experiencing homelessness must have access to assistance regardless of where they live. Source

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