Houston announces 17% decrease in street homelessness in 1 year, one of the biggest in city's history

The City of Houston has announced a "remarkable" decrease in street homelessness from January 2022 to January 2023, according to a release.

Officials said the one-year 17% percent decrease is one of the biggest in the city’s history and the largest since Hurricane Harvey hit in 2017. 
In 2020, Mayor Sylvester Turner partnered with Harris County to specifically reduce the number of individuals and families living on Houston’s streets. The city and county jointly funded and worked with The Way Home, our region’s homeless response system comprised of more than 100 agencies and organizations, to launch the nationally recognized COVID-19 Homeless Housing Program.

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Last year alone, the program housed (with supportive services) or diverted from homelessness more than 4,580 people.

"Reducing homelessness by 17% in one year, and nearly 40 percent since coming into office, does not happen by mistake," said Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner. "Rather, it’s the result of making it a top priority, enhancing our invaluable partnership with Harris County and the community, and strategically funding data-proven, holistic housing solutions. Although Houston is showing the state and nation how to reduce street homelessness and encampments successfully, the job is not done. We will continue our groundbreaking, successful efforts until every Houstonian is off our streets. We must do more."

The Coalition for the Homeless coordinated the annual count. More than 450 volunteers spent three days canvassing the region’s streets, bayous, woods, parking lots, etc., locating individuals who are experiencing homelessness. Volunteers counted 1,242 individuals people living unsheltered in the greater Houston area, of which:

- 42% are experiencing homelessness for the first time.
- 77% are male.
- 7% are veterans.
- 33% are homeless due to loss of job/income.
- 21% are homeless due to family conflict.
- 17% are homeless due to COVID-19 or a natural disaster (e.g., Hurricane Harvey).

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Many cities are experiencing an increase in homelessness due to the expiration of rental assistance programs, a sizable increase in evictions, and looming inflation. The greater Houston area, however, successfully prevented such an increase, as the size of the region’s overall homeless population stayed relatively unchanged. An Independent analysis by the UTHealth Houston School of Public Health noted, "the 2023 count would have been higher had (homeless) housing initiatives not been underway."

More than 9,000 formerly homeless individuals were residing in safe and stable, permanent housing (with services) during the count, up nearly 30 percent from 2020 and almost 60% from 2014.

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Although well below pre-pandemic levels, the number of people residing in homeless shelters increased from the previous year, as shelter capacity increased with beds that were closed during the pandemic returning online (primarily at congregate, family shelters).

For more information and a complete analysis of the count and survey, see the viewer below. 

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