WASHINGTON -- The number of
chronically homeless people declined by 15% last year, according to a
first-of-its-kind government report released Tuesday, though officials
cautioned that part of the decline may be attributable to better
counting methods.Nationwide, almost 1.6 million people were homeless and found shelter last year, the report found."We're very encouraged by this," said Steven Preston, secretary
of Housing and Urban Development, whose department released the report.
"We want to present the facts as we see them, and the facts are really
good. . . . We are making progress."The
report represents the first time that homelessness has been tracked
over the course of an entire year. Prior estimates, starting in 2005,
were "point-in-time" snapshots that provided a count of the homeless
population on a particular night.The new measure will enable
authorities to more effectively allocate funding for homeless programs,
officials said. The government wants to make this an annual report, a
baseline to measure homelessness, they said.The report defines
a chronically homeless person as a disabled individual who has been
continuously homeless for at least a year or has been homeless at least
four times in the previous three years.The
report found that of the nearly 1.6 million homeless who found shelter,
either in emergency housing or in transitional living programs, 77%
were in "central cities" and the rest in suburban and rural areas.
Families with children (typically a mother with two or three children)
constitute 30% of this population; minorities make up 64%; and 13% are
veterans. Advocates for the homeless warn that counting the
population poses challenges. For instance, homeless individuals may not
want to be found. In addition, fallout from the housing crisis and
economic woes may not have been evident during the time of the study,
which was conducted from Oct. 1, 2006 through Sept. 30, 2007."Families
who have been foreclosed upon -- they downsize to a cheaper apartment,
move in with friends or relatives, move into an RV and do everything
they can before they are on the street," said Michael Stoops, acting
executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless. "It's a
two-year downward cycle they're going to be experiencing. There hasn't
been a tidal wave yet." SOURCE:LAT.COM