Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The United States saw an 18.1% increase in homelessness this year, which federal officials attribute to a rising number of asylum seekers, lack of affordable housing and natural disasters. The U.S ...
The number for January 2024 is 18.1% higher than in 2023, when officials counted about 650,000 people living in homeless shelters or in parks and on streets. In 2022, the population of people ...
The U.S. saw an 18.1% increase in homelessness this year, a dramatic rise driven mostly by a lack of affordable housing, natural disasters, and a migrants surge, federal officials said Friday.
“There’s a long-term trend, even longer than 20 years, even going back to WWII, where the price of modest housing is going up faster than wages. That just makes the homelessness problem worse ...
Going back to the first 2007 survey, the U.S. then made steady progress for about a decade in reducing the homeless population as the government focused particularly on increasing investments to ...
The Community Shelter Board's annual "point-in-time" count, which took place on Jan. 25, found there were 2,380 people experiencing homelessness locally — up 1.8% from the 2023 count of 2,337 ...
Denver7's Rob Harris takes an in-depth look into homelessness, and the different ways advocates are working to help people get off the streets. Homelessness on the rise in Colorado and across ...
Homelessness in Tarrant County spiked about 50 percent from 2021 to 2022. About 43 percent of those experiencing homelessness were Black. Why did homelessness skyrocket in 2022?