Most Individuals Were Unsheltered in the Point-in-Time Count

Joseph Shaw
2 min readNov 27, 2021

Most Individuals Were Unsheltered in the Point-in-Time CountTroubling Trends The annual Point-in-Time Count was already underway a few weeks before 2020’s national emergency declaration. It would later reveal a fourth straight year of homeless population increases. Thus far, these increases have been modest. However, they are slowly eroding previous progress made by the homeless services world. As of early 2020, the sizeTroubling Trends
The annual Point-in-Time Count was already underway a few weeks before 2020’s national emergency declaration. It would later reveal a fourth straight year of homeless population increases. Thus far, these increases have been modest. However, they are slowly eroding previous progress made by the homeless services world. As of early 2020, the size of the overall population was only 10 percent smaller than when data collection began in 2007.

Many of the challenges surrounding these increases involve individuals experiencing homelessness. Counts among this cohort have been trending upwards over the last couple of years, increasing by 15 percent. They make up the largest subpopulation within homelessness. Mainly adult men living on their own, they can attract less sympathy from policymakers and the general public than other groups such as women with children. Thus, the assistance available to them in communities across the country may be limited. In 2020, the number of individuals experiencing homelessness was only 1 percent lower than the record high that existed in 2007.

Delving below the surface reveals other troubling trends for some individuals. For the first time in the history of data collection, most individuals were unsheltered. They were not accessing the system of temporary beds and cots that significantly represent the nation’s response to homelessness.

Additionally, after years of significant progress in addressing their needs and reducing their homeless counts, chronic homelessness among individuals is on the rise. In 2020, this subset of individuals was 43 percent larger than they were just a few years earlier in 2016.Joe

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Joseph Shaw
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We are atheists and volunteers Helping the Homeless of Washington DC and surrounding areas (AHHDC). atheistshelping.org.