Edited By: Bianca I.
As you are driving around Austin, it may seem like there are more places you see homelessness occurring. For example, there are tents and countless cases of homelessness scattered all throughout downtown on West Cesar Chavez St. Is it becoming more obvious where homelessness is occurring or has there been an increase in homelessness in the last year?
The Statistics
One of the ways to determine the number of individuals experiencing homelessness is a Point-in-time-count. One was carried out on a night in January where the Continuums of Care count individuals sheltered in emergency shelter and transitional housing on a single night. According to THN.org, alongside this traditional count, “Continuums of Care also must conduct a count of unsheltered homeless persons every other year (odd-numbered years)”. These two ways of collecting information help gather the representation of homelessness in Austin, Texas.
Current Count
According to Statesman.com, the latest point-in-time-count, “found an 11% increase in people experiencing homelessness in the city and in Travis County in 2020, including more than 1,500 people who were unsheltered.” This year, a total of 886 volunteers collected information ranging from transitional housing situations, tents, and other forms of living. According to The Statesman.com, after the count, “1,574 were unsheltered, living outside, in tents or in cars. That number marks a 45% increase in the number of unsheltered homeless people over the 2019 count, which tallied 1,086. Meanwhile, the number of people in shelters or transitional housing was 932, a 20% drop from 2019”. They found that more people were not living in the traditional shelters or housing but there was a huge increase in the number of homeless living on the streets in cars or tents.
Reasons
The City of Austin recently allowed an ordinance regarding camping and living policies in Austin. The two main aspects of the ordinance according to Statesman.com are:
- “The new policy makes public camping — except on parkland — legal, as long as a person does not endanger “the health or safety of another person or of themselves” or make “usage of such area unreasonably inconvenient or hazardous.”
- “It also makes it legal for people to sit, sleep or panhandle on public sidewalks as long as they don’t engage in hazardous behavior or actions deemed aggressive.”
These new ordinances may be the cause of more people living on the streets instead of traditional homeless shelters. This also may be the cause for people noticing more individuals setting up tents and living downtown.
Now What
The new ordinance has been a topic of controversy in Austin, Texas. Some people side with it while others strongly disagree. Regardless of whether or not you agree with the increase of the homeless downtown and other areas in the streets, raise the answer that something needs to be set up to provide these individuals with a solution. Hopefully, throughout the year people begin to realize this issue of homelessness is very real and something needs to be done to assist and help the needs of these individuals. Here are some links to ways you can spread awareness of homelessness in Austin:
Tags: Homelessness, Austin, Current Count