Showing posts with label counts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label counts. Show all posts

Monday, December 15, 2008

Boston Homeless Census

Tonight I made the pilgrimage downtown for the Boston Homeless Census. All communities that receiving funding from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for the Continuum of Care (CoC) need to conduct an annual "census" of people who are experiencing homelessness. It consists of literally counting every person in the streets (and shelters submit their numbers too) on a given night, usually in January.

My partner and I didn't find a single person in our assigned area, but I still didn't consider the evening a waste of time. My partner had 15 years of experience working with youth in the city of Boston. I learned about how the Department of Youth and Families responds to gang violence, conflict resolution, and treatment of the family (not just the individual). It was a great learning experience; much more valuable than adding tick marks to our sheet.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

2008 Homeless Census

To Aid Homeless, First Count Them
Boston Globe, 1/27/2008

Despite a forecast of freezing rain, dozens of volunteers with the Plymouth County Housing Alliance plan to canvass the region Wednesday night to count the number of people who are homeless.

They will act on tips from police, churches, and social workers. Focusing largely on Brockton and Plymouth, the census takers will seek out the buildings, dumpsters, abandoned cars, and camp sites that have in the past provided shelter for people living on the streets.

Last year's count indicated 500 homeless people in Plymouth County - more than 100 living on the street, and the rest in homeless shelters. The most, 39, were in Brockton, followed by Plymouth with 23, Wareham with 21, and Hull with 19. Other area communities recorded six or fewer. Because some communities last year reported no homelessness or refused to participate, 500 is seen as a minimum number for the county.

Tomorrow night, across the country, advocates, shelter workers, and average joes will be going out into their communities to literally count the number of persons who are homeless. This includes persons staying in shelters and those sleeping on the street.

On Saturday, I had the opportunity to spend some time with Fred Berman, who does the homeless counts in Cambridge MA. In order to prepare for the census we hiked through some wooded areas looking for signs of activity and checked the streets for new ATM locations and other tucked away spots. On Wednesday, nine volunteer teams will use the "maps" that we updated to travel specific routes and systematically look for persons sleeping on the street. They will take down as much information as they can for the people that they find and will deliver services at their request. Shelters will also be providing lists of the people that they serve during the same time period.

There are a lot of methodological issues with the count; unduplicating clients who are found on the street and later go in for services, figuring out the best and most comprehensive ways to search for people, gathering sensitive information such as name and social security number, and figuring in the influences of weather and available services. The count does not necessarily give an accurate number of persons that are homeless in any given area, but it does give us a start.

Friday, August 10, 2007

A Downtown Where you Can Count the Homeless on your Fingers and Toes!

Only 25 Homeless Live Downtown: City Census
Chicago Sun-Times 8/10/07
The downtown count was released on the same day Mayor Daley claimed homelessness across the city was down 12 percent -- from 6,715 in January 2005 to 5,922 at the same time this year -- marking progress in his 10-year Plan to End Homelessness.
So, apparently someone in Chicago thinks that there are just about as many homeless downtown as there were students in an average sized elementary school class. Maybe they did go downtown and count people but to say that there are only 25 people sleeping on the streets of Chicago in the middle of the summer completely trivializes the issue! 1) What about all of the people in shelters? Aren't they homeless too? Even if there really are only 25 people on the streets why not throw out the number of people in shelters for comparison? and 2) Are you sure you looked everywhere? Did you check under the couch and behind the fridge?

For more of this crazy statistic:
City Census: 24 Homeless People Live in Downtown Chicago
WQAD 8/10/07

EDIT: Thank goodness someone came to there senses!
Count of 24 homeless was based on just 12-block area
Chicago Sun Times 8/16/07

Monday, July 23, 2007

Data Matters

Fight Homelessness With Data
Boston Globe 7/2o/07
IN THE 1980S, volunteers fought homelessness with bread lines and soup kitchens. But as the lines got longer, it became clear that a meal and a cup of sympathy weren't enough.

Now public policy is getting smarter, and instead of managing homelessness, the federal government is seeking to end it. Rather than join sleep-outs, officials are relying on data. This change should transform lives and mesh well with state and local efforts.
As a researcher, and a fan of quant at that, articles like this one excite me. Not just because they are good job security (and who doesn't love job security?), but because I'm a big believer in research, we need to understand the intricacies of the problem if we are going to find a way to solve it. Understanding homelessness requires more than anecdotal evidence. We also need to know who these people are, what brought them to the streets, and what the barriers preventing them from getting/staying housed are.

Counts of the homeless are conducted annually, usually in January, as point in time samples; a group of volunteers hit shelters, soup kitchens, and the streets to literally count each and every homeless person that they can find. While they don't get everyone the counts are useful to compare changes from year-to-year, if the methodology doesn't change. And the fact that the department of Housing and Urban Development requires counts for funding is a bit of a motivator to get out and conduct one.

For some more info on counts and a great report:
New Homeless Count Shows Need For More Housing
NBC 30 7/20/07 [Homeless count in CT]-2007 Point In Time Result Full Report

MSU Students to Survey Area Homeless

News-Leader.com 7/67/07 [Three-day count as follow-up to one day count]