News Release
For Immediate Release
Contacts:
Rick Crager, 503-986-2005, rick.crager@state.or.us
Roberto Franco, 503-986-6732, roberto.franco@state.or.us
Lisa Joyce, 503-986-0951, lisa.joyce@state.or.us
Number of homeless people rises throughout
state
Salem
– Spiraling unemployment and inability to pay rent are behind a
dramatic jump in homelessness throughout the state, according to data
released this week by Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS).
“The numbers confirm what we already
knew, families and individuals can’t afford to pay for one of
their most basic needs – a place to live,” said Rick Crager, OHCS deputy
director.
The number of people in
Oregon
identified as homeless
increased 37 percent from the same time last year, according to the
statewide One-Night Homeless Count.
“It’s a new face of homelessness
that we’ve not seen before,” said Corky Senecal, director of
Housing and Emergency Services at Neighbor Impact in
Central
Oregon
, an area hard hit by unemployment and resulting
homelessness.
“Last year these people would have read
the stories in the paper, watched them on the evening news – and
very possibly would have written a check to an organization that helps
the homeless,” Senecal said. “Today, they are homeless.”
After conducting the one-night count,
OHCS’s partners identified 17,122 people experiencing homelessness
in January 2009, up from 12,529 people in 2008.
The most dramatic differences between the 2008 and 2009 counts are:
- A doubling in the number of homeless
veterans.
- A 100 percent increase in the number of
childless couples experiencing homelessness.
- A 150 percent increase in the number of
people tallied in the street count.
- More than four times the number of
households living in doubled-up situations with friends or family.
- An additional 1,150 people stated they
were camping.
- A 32 percent increase in the number of
unaccompanied youth.
In the most recent count, 9,890 individuals
– nearly 60 percent of the people identified as homeless –
did not receive services or shelter. People in more than 2,000
households are on the streets or living with friends or family. And
close to half of households counted had a member with an emotional,
mental or substance abuse issue.
“Unfortunately, state resources are
shrinking as the need for a strong safety net grows,” said Crager, who serves as chair
of the state Ending
Homelessness Advisory Council that created the state’s
10-year plan to end homelessness. “A Senate bill to hit the House
floor soon will give us some tools to respond more effectively to this
challenge.”
SB 200, which was introduced on behalf of
OHCS, reorients the state’s response to homelessness. The bill
establishes a state policy on homelessness and requires the Department
of Human Services and OHCS to better coordinate housing and services.
Most significantly, it encourages a focus on permanent housing as the
preferred response to homelessness.
Crager encouraged a
careful reading of the One-Night Homeless Count data, citing local
agency improvements in finding people experiencing homelessness as one
of many factors affecting the count.
“There are more homeless on the streets,
and we’re better at finding them,” he said, citing homeless
numbers rising from 3,294 on the street in 2008 to 8,561 in 2009.
“Weather and other environmental factors
can also affect the count’s accuracy,” Crager added. “For
example, in 2008 snowy conditions impeded the count in rural
Oregon
. In urban
areas, cold weather can attract people to warming centers and other
services, making them easier to find.”
Mary Li, manager
with
Multnomah
County
’s
Department of County Human Services noted that the county opened two
family-focused warming centers, close to transportation during the
coldest months.
“We believe that this resource was
partially responsible for the increase in our numbers served,” Li said.
For data by county of the One-Night Homeless
Count, visit http://www.ohcs.oregon.gov/OHCS/pdfs/Summary1_ONHC2009.pdf.
To find your local Community Action Partner,
visit www.caporegon.org/members.htm.
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