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Homelessness in the United States by state
Homelessness in the United States by state
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The official homelessness statistics by state, 2019
The statewide homelessness population ratios as compared with the national U.S. homelessness ratio (0.17% or 171 persons per 100,000) in 2019.[1][2] Of the 9 states (Alaska, California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington) and the District of Columbia that have homelessness ratios higher than the United States as a whole, only Vermont did not have median gross rents higher than the United States as a whole in the 2015–2019 American Community Survey 5-year estimates.

Homelessness in the United States has differing rates of prevalence by state. The total number of homeless people in the United States fluctuates and constantly changes, hence a comprehensive figure encompassing the entire nation is not issued, since counts from independent shelter providers and statistics managed by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development vary greatly. Federal HUD counts hover annually at around 500,000 people. Point-in-time counts are also vague measures of homeless populations and are not a precise and definitive indicator for the total number of cases, which may differ in both directions up or down. The most recent figure for 2019, was 567,715 individuals nationally that experienced homelessness at a point in time during this period.[3]

Homeless people may use shelters, or may sleep in cars, tents, on couches, or in other public places. Separate counts of sheltered people and unsheltered people are critical in understanding the homeless population. Each state has different laws, social services and medical policies, and other conditions which influence the number of homeless persons, and what services are available to homeless people in each state.

A 2022 study found that differences in per capita homelessness rates across the country are not due to mental illness, drug addiction, or poverty, but to differences in the cost of housing due largely to housing shortages, with West Coast cities including Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, and Los Angeles having homelessness rates five times that of areas with much lower housing costs, like Arkansas, West Virginia, and Detroit, even though the latter locations have high burdens of opioid addiction and poverty.[4][5][6][7]

The state by state counts of people listed below are derived from under-reported federal HUD statistics.

In June 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling which permitted cities to ban homeless camps, thus making it possible to jail people for sleeping in areas such as public parks.[8][9]

Alaska

[edit]

Mental illness in Alaska is a current epidemic that the state struggles to manage. The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness stated that as of January 2018, Alaska had an estimated 2,016 citizens experiencing homelessness on any given day while around 3,784 public school students experienced homelessness over the course of the year as well.[10] Within that niche group,[clarification needed] an average of 25–28% of the homeless are either moderately or severely affected by mental illness, according to Torrey[11] (2018) with the Mental Illness Policy Organization on studies done in 2015. Currently, At the state's flagship Alaska Psychiatric Institute, almost half the rooms are empty, a problem that has persisted for several years (Anchorage Daily News. 2018).[12]

To assess the situation of each individual physically and mentally, and consider the social disparity that they may also have issues with. Financially, having money problems is a stressful situation to any ‘normal’ individual, but to have financial troubles as someone with mental illnesses could be nearly life-threatening. Trying to find capable staff to handle the needs of the homeless mentally ill, when they are sent in for processing in the Alaska Jail system to keep them off of the streets, is hard to come by due to budgetary issues and finding the workforce for this field.

Alabama

[edit]

Although throughout the United States panhandling is discouraged, passive panhandling falls under First Amendment rights to free speech.[13] In Alabama the prohibition of aggressive panhandling and regulation of passive panhandling is controlled by individual cities, with many panhandlers being charged with loitering offenses.[14] Loitering for the purposes of begging and prostitution in Alabama is a criminal offense.[15] An issue for Alabamians is the proportion of panhandlers defined as vagrants, who contrary to their implications, are not homeless but accept the generosity of the community under this false pretense.[16]

As the cities decide ordinances for the control of panhandling, there is a variety of methods used across the state depending on the issues in each city. Many cities such as Mobile, Alabama have introduced a set of ordinances to prohibit panhandling in the "Downtown Visitors Domain" area, as well regulations for panhandlers in the rest of the city including disallowing; panhandling at night, physical contact while panhandling, panhandling in groups, and approaching those in queues or traffic.[17] These ordinances are an improvement on the previously vague prohibition of "begging".[17]

For those soliciting donations for charitable organizations, a permit must be obtained for the fundraising operation to be exempt from panhandling ordinances.[18] Panhandling in the Downtown Visitors Domain may result in fines and jail sentences for those involved.[19] Another effort to limit panhandling in Mobile is an initiative using donation meters through which people can donate money to approved charities in attempts to resolve the necessity of panhandling by providing disadvantaged citizens with resources. This method attempts to lessen the recurring arrest and release of the publicly intoxicated, who are often homeless or vagrant and participate in panhandling.[20]

An important concern for those in Alabama's capital city, Montgomery, is those who travel from other cities to panhandle, with a police report from November 2016 showing that most panhandlers in the area had travelled to the city for the purposes of begging.[21] In the city of Daphne, panhandling is prohibited within 25 feet of public roadways and violators are subject to fines,[22] while the cities of Gardendale and Vestavia Hills prevent all forms of panhandling on private and public property.[23][24] The city of Tuscaloosa prohibits all aggressive panhandling, as well as passive panhandling near banks and ATMs, towards people in parked or stopped vehicles and at public transport facilities.[25]

Alabama's most populous city, Birmingham has considered limitations on panhandling that disallow solicitation near banks and ATMs, with fines for infractions such as aggressive or intimidating behaviour.[26] Another concern for Birmingham is litter left behind in popular panhandling sites, especially for business owners in the downtown area.[27][28] In Birmingham, specifically asking for money is considered illegal panhandling.[29] The City Action Partnership (CAP) of Birmingham encourages civilians to report and discourage panhandlers throughout the city, especially under unlawful circumstances including panhandling using children, aggression, false information and panhandling while loitering as prohibited by City Ordinances.[30]

Within the city of Opelika it is considered a misdemeanour to present false or misleading information while panhandling, and there are requirements for panhandlers to possess a panhandling permit.[31] Threatening behaviours towards those solicited to are also considered misdemeanours and include; being too close, blocking the path of those approached, or panhandling in groups of two or more persons. Those previously charged with these offences in Opelika are not eligible for a panhandling permit within set time limits.[32] In this sense panhandling is a major issue in the region. Aggressive measures have been taken in order to address this issue.

Arizona

[edit]

The state of Arizona has been very active in attempting to criminalize acts of panhandling. Measures have included arresting and jailing individuals caught in the act. Arizona's Revised Statutes title 13. Criminal Code 2905(a)(3) sought to ban begging from the state of Arizona, specifically in the area of being "present in a public place to beg, unless specifically authorized by law."[33] The city of Flagstaff took the policy a step further by implementing a practice of arresting, jailing and prosecuting individuals who are beg for money or food.[33]

In February 2013, Marlene Baldwin, a woman in her late 70s was arrested and jailed for asking a plain clothed officer for $1.25. Between June 2012 and May 2013 135 individuals were arrested under the law.[34] After criticism and a lawsuit from The American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona the policy was deemed unconstitutional, as it breached free speech rights granted by both federal and state constitutions. In his judgement, Judge Neil V. Wake declared the A.R.S 13-2905(a)(3) was void and prohibited any practices the city of Flagstaff has implemented that " interferes with, targets, cites, arrests, or prosecutes any person on the basis of their act(s) of peaceful begging in public areas."[33]

Despite this, the state of Arizona continued to pursue other ways to criminalize panhandling. Their response to Judge Wake's judgment was to criminalize "aggressive panhandling. The bill that passed into law in 2015 prohibits individuals from asking for money within 15-feet of an ATM or bank without prior permission from the property owner.[35] It prohibits "following the person being solicited in a manner that is intended or likely to cause a reasonable person to fear imminent bodily harm," or "obstructing the safe or free passage of the person being solicited."[35]

The city of Chandler has proposed a new bill that prevents panhandling along city streets justifying the law by citing safety concerns. The proposed laws would make it a civil traffic offence for an individual to be at a median strip for any purposes other than crossing the road.[36] Under the proposed law, the first violation would be treated as a civil traffic offence; however, a second violation within 24 months would be treated as a Class 1 misdemeanor citation in which an individual could be fined a maximum of $2500 and face up to six months in jail.[36] The State of Arizona continues to seek measures that would both limit panhandling but also satisfy the judgement made by Judge Neil V. Wake and the First Amendment.

Arkansas

[edit]

In 2015, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development released a report detailing the decline of homelessness in Arkansas, but that the level of homeless veterans had increased. They found that 2,560 people were homeless in Arkansas in January 2015, and that 207 were veterans, an 83% increase in veteran homelessness since January 2009. Arkansas is one of only five states to have seen homelessness among veterans to increase by more than 100 people in that time. Of those five states, Arkansas had the largest number of homeless veterans. This is compared to nationwide, where homelessness among veterans has decreased by 35% since 2009.[37]

As of 2015, it was estimated that 1,334 of the homeless in Arkansas are youths. In Arkansas, the most common causes of homelessness are income issues and personal relationships. The median time spent homeless is 12 months, however 30% have been homeless for over two years.[38] Jon Woodward from the 7Hills shelter in Fayetteville, AR said "primarily the two largest groups of who's homeless in our region are families with children and veterans. And those are two groups that our community really does care about and can get behind supporting."[39] Despite this, shelters in Little Rock have struggled with insufficient funding and police harassment, resulting in reducing hours or closure.[40]

Under loitering laws, lingering or remaining in a public place with the intention to beg is prohibited in Arkansas.[41] However, in November 2016 in Little Rock, a judge ruled that this law banning begging was unconstitutional, and violated the First Amendment. The American Civil Liberties Union filed the case on behalf of Michael Rodgers, a disabled veteran, and Glynn Dilbeck, a homeless man who was arrested for holding up a sign asking for money to cover his daughter's medical expenses. ACLU were successful in their challenge, meaning that law enforcement officers will be prohibited from arresting or issuing citations to people for begging or panhandling.[42]

The loitering law has had a history of being abused by police officers in the state of Arkansas. For example, two homeless men reported separate incidents of having been kicked out of Little Rock Bus Station by police officers. Despite showing valid tickets that showed that their bus would arrive within 30 minutes, they were told they could not wait on the premises because they were loitering. In another incident, police officers told homeless people to leave a free public event or be subject to arrest for loitering in a park, although vendors at the event had encouraged the homeless to attend and take free samples of their merchandise. In 2005, police assembled an undercover taskforce to crack down on panhandling in the downtown Little Rock area, arresting 41 people.[40] 72% of the homeless report ever being arrested.[38]

California

[edit]
California Governor Gavin Newsom speaks about homelessness and federal support, 2019.
A tent city in Oakland California, E. 12th Street, set up by local homeless people, 2019

About 0.4% of Californians and people who live in the state (161,000) are homeless.

In 2017, California had an oversized share of the nation's homeless: 22%, for a state whose residents make up only 12% of the country's total population. The California State Auditor found in their April 2018 report Homelessness in California, that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development noted that "California had about 134,000 homeless individuals, which represented about 24 percent of the total homeless population in the nation”[43]

The California State Auditor is an independent government agency responsible for analyzing California economic activities and then issuing reports.[44] The Sacramento Bee notes that large cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco both attribute their increases in homeless to the housing shortage.[44] In 2017, homeless persons in California numbered 135,000 (a 15% increase from 2015).[45]

In June 2019, Los Angeles County officials reported over 58,000 homeless in the county.[46] Many of LA's homeless live in Downtown, Skid Row, Westlake, and Venice Beach.

San Francisco

[edit]

A 2023 study published by the University of California, San Francisco found that around 90% of the homeless population of California lost their housing while living in the state. The research also revealed that around half of the homeless population is over 50 years old, with black residents disproportionately represented, that the majority of the homeless population want to find housing, and the high cost of housing was the greatest obstacle to exiting homelessness.[47]

San Francisco and the general Bay Area has tens of thousands of homeless. SF has between 7–10,000 homeless people.

In June 2024, the Supreme Court issued a 6-3 ruling overturning a California appeals court decision, thereby allowing cities to ban homeless camps and sleeping in public areas.[8]

Colorado

[edit]
Homeless man sleeping in 37°F weather at the Colorado Supreme Court Building

Homelessness is a growing problem in the State of Colorado, as the state's population grows. 0.2–0.3% of Coloradans or people who live there are homeless on a given night.

Denver and Colorado Springs have the largest homeless communities.

In April 2012,[48] Denver enacted the Urban Camping Ban due to the occupy Denver protest and the number of homeless on the 16th Street Mall. Mayor Michael Hancock and City Council passed the urban camping ban which prohibited individuals from sleeping in public places with a blanket over them or something between them and the ground.

Colorado was ranked 7th in 2017 for largest homeless veteran count as well as 8th in the country out of 48 major metropolitan cities for homeless individuals.[49]

The Right to Rest Act was introduced to Colorado, as well as Oregon and California, that changed the way the city treated unsheltered citizens. This piece of legislature called the Right to Rest Act was introduced in 2015 and attempted to offer homeless rights to sleep on public property like parks and sidewalks.[50]

The homeless population over the last four years within the state of Colorado has remained fairly constant. According to HUD's PIT Count (2018)[51] there are 10,857 people who are currently homeless within the state of Colorado.[52]

Connecticut

[edit]

As of 2022 there were roughly 2,930 homeless people in Connecticut, an increase from 2,594 the previous year. In June 2023, House Bill 6601 was passed in the House and Senate, which declares homelessness a public health emergency.[53][54]

Delaware

[edit]

A survey in 2023 estimated there was about 1,255 homeless people in Delaware.[55]

Florida

[edit]

Because of its warm weather, Florida is a favorable destination for the homeless.[56]

As of January 2017, there are an estimated 32,190 homeless individuals in Florida. Of this high number, 2,846 are family households, 2,019 are unaccompanied young adults (aged 18–24), 2,817 are veterans, and an estimated 5,615 are individuals experiencing chronic homelessness.[57] Due to the eviction moratorium ending during the early fall of 2021, the number of homeless individuals and families may increase. According to a January 2020 count, this figure was 27,487 on any given day, a decrease from previous years. However, this figure could likely increase due to the COVID-19 eviction moratoriums in the United States that started in September and October 2021.[58]

Pinellas County has one of the highest concentrations of any Florida county, at nearly 0.3% with nearly 3,000 homeless people and a population in general of almost one million. It is second next to Miami-Dade County's homeless population at 4,235, but this is due to a higher general population (6 million; 0.08%) and still a lower prevalence closer to Florida and the U.S.'s average between 0.1 and 0.2%.[59]

Various cities in Florida have laws against aggressive panhandling and general panhandling that could result in fines or demands to leave, as well as sleeping on benches or parks.

Georgia

[edit]

The rise of neoliberal governance has dramatically changed the way that people who are homeless in heavily populated cities are dealt with and treated around the United States.[60] Neoliberal governance is the promotion of human advancement through economic growth. The most accepted idea of achieving this is by pushing towards a free market economy which thrives off of not having much government or state participation.[61]

In the 1970s and 1980s, Atlanta, Georgia was one of these cities where businesses were very active in their efforts to decrease homelessness in the spirit of this idea. The Central Atlanta Progress (CAP) was one of the most notable voices in Atlanta promoting these sorts of initiatives. For example, their first major initiative was to criminalize homelessness. They saw the homeless population as a threat to public safety. Their efforts were met with conflicted responses from police and Georgian citizens due to the large size and demographic makeup of the homeless population in Atlanta. The majority of the homeless were black males.[61]

On top of that, Atlanta's first black mayor, Maynard Jackson, had been recently elected into office. Having elected a black male into office, the topic of race and politics was prominent in the minds of many Georgian citizens.[61] The idea to criminalize homelessness looked bad in the eyes of these citizens and created a lot of skepticism about the CAP's true purpose. Participation was not met in the way the CAP had hoped for.

Since the 1970s and 1980s attempts to combat homelessness have continued not just from businesses but from the government level as well.[62] In 1996 to prepare for hosting the Olympic games, Fulton County provided the homeless people in the area with the opportunity to leave the town as long as they could provide proof of either a family or a job waiting for them at their choice of destination. Fulton County would then give them a one way bus ticket provided that the recipient signed a document agreeing not to return to Atlanta.[63]

While it is unclear how many people took this offer to leave the city for free, it is estimated that thousands of the homeless population in Atlanta did take this one-way ticket. For the ones that did not leave, around 9,000 homeless persons were arrested for activities such as[64] trespassing,[65] disorderly conduct, panhandling, and[66] urban camping. Urban camping is the use of public or city owned space to sleep or to protect one's personal belongings. For example, the use of a tent underneath a bridge in order to serve as a living space is prohibited.

Action towards panhandling has also been seen from the government.[67] Many downtown cities around the United States have tried to combat panhandlers by prohibiting panhandling at certain locations as well as restricting the time periods that it is allowed. In Georgia, Atlanta was proactive with this idea by banning panhandling in what is known as the "tourist triangle" in August 2005.[68] Another ban prohibited panhandling within 15 feet of common public places such as ATM's and train stations. Violations are punished with either a fine or imprisonment.[69]

In 2012, the city of Atlanta created an anti-panhandling law which criminalizes aggressive panhandling. Aggressive panhandling is defined as any form of gestures or intense intervention for the sake of retrieving monetary substance.[69] This includes blocking the path of a bystander, following a bystander, using harsh language directed at a bystander, or any other indications that could be perceived as a threat by the person it is directed at. Violations are punished based on the number of offenses with the third offense being the highest. The third offense and all future offenses beyond that will result in a minimum of 90 days in jail. A second offense will result in 30 days of jail time while the first offense results in up to 30 days of community service.[70]

The policies that Atlanta has put in place were very similar to the ones that Athens, Georgia currently has. Failing to adhere to the law could result in jail time or community service. Athens-Clarke County added the possibility for a fine to be paid instead of serving prison time or participating in community service.

Hawaii

[edit]
A homeless woman in Hawaii, 2016

In Honolulu, aggressive measures have been taken to remove the homeless from popular tourist spots such as Waikiki and Chinatown. Measures include criminalizing sitting or lying on sidewalks and transportation of homeless to the mainland.[71] Section 14-75 of the Hawaii County Code gives that soliciting for money in an aggressive manner is illegal, with "aggressive" behaviors defined as those that cause fear, following, touching, blocking or using threatening gestures in the process of panhandling.[72] The citation penalty is a $25 fine and may include a term of imprisonment.[73]

Maria Foscarinis, executive director of the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, says that panhandling restrictions are a result of gentrification coupled with Hawaii's dependence on tourism.[74] In 2013 alone, tourism in Hawaii generated $14.5 billion, which averaged $39 million per day.[75] Hawaiian locals and business operators such as Dave Moskowitz agree with these restraints, arguing that panhandling is bad for tourism.[73]

Police in Hawaii state that panhandling is not a prominent issue, nor is it prioritized.[76] Legally, ethically and practically, it is difficult for police to enforce strict panhandling laws at all times, thus police discretion plays a vital role in determining who is cited and how many citations are given.

For the panhandling population who are cited, there is a general feeling of indifference or disregard, including refusal to pay fines.[71] A number of studies indicate that the average panhandler is an unmarried, unemployed male in his 30s to 40s, often with drug/alcohol problems, a lack of social support and laborer's skills.[76] These factors are likely to affect the poor perception of these laws in the panhandling population.

Social justice advocates and non-governmental organizations will argue that this approach is therefore counterintuitive. They argue that panhandling laws violate free speech, criminalize homelessness and remove an essential part of destitute people's lives. Doran Porter, executive director of the Affordable Housing and Homeless Alliance, argues that these laws merely deal with the symptoms of homelessness rather than fixing the problem.[73]

Courts clarify whether the laws that restrict panhandling are constitutionally valid. In 2015, the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaii foundation (ACLUH) paired with Davis Levin Livingston Law Firm to represent Justin Guy in suit against the Hawaii County. Guy's lawyers argued that prohibiting their client from holding up a sign that read 'Homeless Please Help' offended his First Amendment right to freedom of speech.[77] Matthew Winter, a lawyer on the case, made reference to political candidates, who are lawfully able to hold signs, to contrast against the inability of the poor to hold up signs asking for help.[77] The court ruled in Guy's favour, which led to an award of $80,000 compensation and repeal of subsections 14–74, 14–75, 15–9, 15–20, 15–21, 15–35 and 15–37 of the Hawaii County Code. In a statement, Guy emphasized the need for the State of Hawaii to treat the homeless with the same dignity as the general population.[77]

The future of panhandling laws in Hawaii is reliant on legislators and their perception of panhandling's impact on tourism. By utilizing aggressive political language, such as 'the war on homelessness' and 'emergency state,' Hawaiian politics will continue to criminalize the behaviors of destitute populations. On the other hand, with pressure from state/federal departments and non-governmental organizations, restrictions on panhandling laws may be possible. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, for example, has stated that it would not provide homeless assistance funds to states that criminalize homelessness.[71] Given that Hawaii has one of the US's largest growing homeless populations (between 2007 and 2016, Hawaii saw a 30.5% increase in homelessness), it is in a poor position to reject federal funding and assistance from non-governmental organizations.[78]

Idaho

[edit]

Illinois

[edit]

The city of Chicago, Illinois has gained a reputation as the city with the most homeless people, rivaling Los Angeles and New York City, although no statistical data have backed this up. The reputation stems primarily from the subjective number of beggars found on the streets, rather than any sort of objective statistical census data. In 2007, Chicago had far less homeless people per capita than peers New York, and Los Angeles, or other major cities such as Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Boston, among others, with only 5,922 homeless recorded in a one night count.[79]

A 2019 study by the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless found that among Chicago's homeless population for 2017, 18,000 had college degrees and 13,000 were employed.[80]

Despite the challenges surrounding the search for objective data, a 2022 study led by University of Chicago Health Lab researchers Jackie Soo and Leoson Hoay uncovered significant costs associated with high users of the city's social services, including homelessness services. These costs were amplified within a particularly vulnerable group that consistently cycled across multiple services - specifically the homelessness system, hospital system, and criminal justice system.[81]

Chicago's response to homelessness involves a diverse ecosystem of non-governmental organizations. Advocacy groups like The Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, social enterprises like StreetWise, and direct service providers like Care for Friends all play a critical role.[82]

Indiana

[edit]

In Indianapolis, Indiana, as many as 2,200 people are homeless on any given night, and as many as 15,000 individuals over the course of a year. Indianapolis is notable among cities of similar size for having only faith-based shelters, such as the century-old[83] Wheeler Mission. In 2001, Mayor Bart Peterson endorsed a 10-year plan, called the[84] Blueprint to End Homelessness, and made it one of his administration's top priorities. The plan's main goals are for more affordable housing units, employment opportunities, and support services. The Blueprint notwithstanding, Indianapolis has criminalized aspects of homelessness, such as making panhandling a misdemeanor. The City-County Council has twice, in April 2002, and August 2005, denied the zoning necessary to open a new shelter for homeless women.[85]

Iowa

[edit]

Homelessness in Iowa is a significant issue. In 2015, 12,918 Iowans were homeless and 'served by emergency shelters, transitional housing, rapid rehousing or street outreach projects'.[86] Another 8,174 Iowans were at risk of being homeless and lived in supportive housing or were involved in street outreach projects.[86] The actual number of homeless Iowans is likely to be substantially greater, as these figures only account for those who sought help. Homelessness is particularly problematic in Iowa City, as there is only one shelter in the city to cater for its large homeless population.[87] Those who have been abusing substances are prohibited from using this shelter, thus excluding a large proportion of homeless people.[88]

Panhandling has become an increasingly significant problem in Iowa. There is much controversy surrounding how best to deal with this widespread issue. Debate has focused on the best way to balance compassion, free speech and public safety.[89] Iowan cities have struggled with finding the balance between avoiding criminalising poverty, while at the same time not encouraging begging, particularly that which is aggressive. There has also been widespread concern about the legitimacy of panhandlers and the significant amount of money that some are making. Cedar Rapids panhandler, Dawn, admitted that she has come across many illegitimate panhandlers. These include people who already have access to housing and financial assistance, and even some who pretend to be disabled or to be a veteran.[90]

A famous incident in Muscatine, Iowa, photos of which went viral, provides a prime example of the tensions that exist around the legitimacy of panhandlers. In December 2015, two young boys were panhandling, holding signs which read 'broke and hungry please'.[91] Pothoff, who worked nearby, offered the boys a job. The boys stated that they were 'not from around here', smirked and walked away. Pothoff then decided to join the boys on the side of the road, holding up his own sign, which read 'Offered these guys a job, they said no, don't give them money'.

Following the Supreme Court case, United States v Kokinda, 497 U.S. 720, 725 (1990), the right to beg for money is protected speech under the First Amendment.[92] Therefore, panhandling cannot be entirely prohibited. However, as per Ward v Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781, 791 (1989), US cities may enact 'reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions' which are narrowly drafted to 'serve a significant governmental interest' and also allow for this speech to occur in an alternative setting.[92]

This has led to a trend amongst many Iowan cities of enacting ordinances which control and restrict panhandling. In Bettendorf, aggressive panhandling, panhandling on a travelled portion of a roadway and soliciting on a bus, bus stop, within 15 feet of an automated teller machine or on Interstate 74 exit ramps between certain hours of the day are all prohibited.[93] A panhandling licence is required and this can be revoked for 6 months if any of these regulations are breached, in addition to a fine or incarceration.[94] Bettendorf grants panhandling licences for free, however licences must be renewed every 6 months and candidates must undergo a police check.[95]

Similarly, in Davenport, aggressive panhandling, soliciting within 20 feet of an automated teller machine or bank entrance, or on a roadway or median of a roadway are prohibited.[94] Police Chief Paul Sirorski admitted that the ordinance can be difficult to enforce and that the number of complaints concerning panhandlers in Davenport is increasing.[96] In light of community concerns, Davenport is set to review the ordinance.[97]

Iowa City has similar ordinances and has installed special purple parking meters which are used to fund homeless organizations.[98] The aim is to encourage people to give money to homeless programs through parking fees, rather than directly to beggars. However, some argue that it is better to donate money to panhandlers than to organizations as you can be sure that the money is going directly to the person without any loss through administrative costs.[99]

As Cedar Rapids currently has no ordinance controlling panhandling, there has been an increase in the number of panhandlers.[100] Cedar Rapids has also seen an increase in the number of complaints concerning panhandlers.[100] This has led to consideration of the introduction of an ordinance that would prohibit panhandling in certain areas. The ordinance also includes plans for police to be able to give resource cards to panhandlers. These cards provide a list of resources which provide housing, food and financial assistance.

Councils claim that these ordinances are necessary to ensure public safety and prevent traffic accidents. Other rationales behind these laws include 'to improve the image of the city to tourists, businesses and other potential investors' and to reflect the growing "compassion fatigue" of the city's middle and upper class after increasingly being exposed to widespread homelessness.[101] However, Saelinger (2006) argues that these laws '"criminalize" the very condition of being homeless'.[101] Saelinger (2006) also claims that through the implementation of these laws, governments have focused on making homelessness invisible, rather than working to eradicate it.[101] The aesthetics of cities has also influenced the enactment of these ordinances, with businesses complaining that panhandlers bother their customers and make them feel uncomfortable, in addition to ruining the image of the city.[98]

Kansas

[edit]

In comparison with the US, Kansas continued to have an increasing level of homelessness until 2015. Between 2007 and 2015, homelessness across the US fell by 13 percent, while in Kansas it rose by more than 23 percent. Individuals predominantly fell victim to homelessness rather than families, generating this increase in homelessness.[102] This is in discord with Sedgwick County's reputation as one of the most successful counties in the US for providing shelter to homeless family members and individuals. Chronic homelessness was seen to be more prevalent and increasing as was the proportion of veterans subjected to sleeping on the streets.[102] However, Kansas currently holds approximately 0.5% of the total homelessness in the US, listing itself in the bottom third of all of the US states.[103]

Begging and associated crimes

[edit]

There is much concern within Kansas regarding the legitimacy of begging and panhandling. For example, within Wichita alone, there are many reports of persons posing as homeless to make a quick income and fuel their addiction habits such as alcohol, drugs, and sex.[104] This has been seen to increase recently with the development of boutiques and shops that are drawing growing numbers of customers and tourists to the area. Residents have further complained that many whom are homeless are frequently choosing to bypass available services in order to maintain their lifestyle. This increase in 'untruthful' begging has resulted in further chronic homelessness, as those who are most genuinely in need are being sidelined by 'quick-fix intruders'.[104]

The consequences of begging and panhandling across Kansas is not uniform, it differs from county to county, with some counties choosing to acknowledge it as a crime and others rejecting its presence. Under Kansas' Wyandotte County code of ordinances, panhandling is deemed an unlawful act when it occurs in an aggressive manner.[105] The consequences of panhandling present as an unclassified misdemeanour, which under Wyandotte County law signifies that unless the penalty is otherwise stated, it will receive the same penalty as a Class C misdemeanour i.e., punishable by up to one month in jail and a fine of up to $500.[106] This is less severe in comparison to Wichita County whereby the act of begging is deemed as a crime of loitering and is penalized with a fine of up to $1,000, one year imprisonment, or both.[107]

Counties such as Shawnee County and Sedgwick differ, with Sedgwick County making no mention of such acts constituting crimes within its ordinance, Topeka follows suit. Such a scenario in Topeka occurred due to a 9–0 vote to defer action of panhandling, where a penalty of 179 days in jail and/or a fine up to $499 might have been applied if caught violating this ordinance.[108] This ordinance was only suspended indefinitely. If it is reviewed and passed, it may result in the banning of solicitation on private property unless prior permission has been granted from the property owner. Begging would not be affected and would remain legal.[109]

Topeka currently does hold laws against soliciting on public property, which have not been found to target the homeless, rather targeting many backpackers instead. According to Topeka law, it is illegal to solicit funds, rides, or contributions along roadways, meaning that persons whom present cardboard signs asking for lifts throughout the city can be liable to penalties.[110] Such a law has stemmed from the high prevalence of scams in the area, such as men saying they have mechanical issues with their cars and women citing domestic abuse and the need for funds to stay at a hotel, which has forced a public awareness and therefore campaigns in the area.[110]

Kansas has a variety of services available to those who encounter panhandlers with organizations such as Downtown Wichita[111] in association with the Wichita police, creating information on methods to stop panhandling. This has been developed in the mode of a myriad of pamphlets regarding available services for the homeless which can be printed off and distributed by businesses when they encounter persons panhandling or begging.[104] Such services often report back to the Homeless Outreach Team in an attempt to reduce the prevalence of homelessness in the long-term.[112]

Persons encountering panhandlers and beggars in Kansas, if unable to politely refuse, are encouraged to contact 911.[104][112]

Kentucky

[edit]

Many city and counties within the United States have enacted ordinances to limit or ban panhandling.[113] However, the legality of such laws has recently come under scrutiny, being challenged as a violation of individuals first amendment rights.[114] The first amendment states that "Congress shall make no law ... prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech."[115] It is therefore argued that stopping someone from asking for help from their fellow citizens is impeding on their right to free speech.

Panhandling laws differ throughout the state of Kentucky. In the city of Louisville, for example, it is an offence to panhandle in certain locations including: within 20 feet of a bus stop or ATM, in a crosswalk/ street, or anywhere that may be impeding others.[116] The ordinance places a strong emphasis on aggressive panhandling which had become a prominent issue within Louisville.[116] These municipal laws are one of the many that have recently come under scrutiny, being challenged as unconstitutional under first amendment rights.[114][117] In October 2016, a judge of the Jefferson Court District ruled against the laws, deeming them to be unconstitutional.[118] This decision is currently being reviewed by the Kentucky Supreme Court.[118]

In contrast, the city of Ashland, Kentucky has not come under scrutiny as their ordinance is less comprehensive and therefore less likely to impede individuals rights.[119] However, recently the ordinance was amended to further crack down on the act of panhandling, adding an amendment to stop panhandlers from walking out into traffic, in an attempt to keep both beggars and the public safe.[119]

Panhandling laws are often controversial as they are generally welcomed by the public, who can feel harassed.[120] However, it is also argued that they are disadvantaging the homeless and those in need.[120] As an attorney of the UCLA states, panhandling laws are "misdirected" and their purpose is to try and hide the problem of homelessness.[121]

In 2017, there were 4,538 reported homeless people in the state of Kentucky (0.10% of the population), which is consistent with rates of homelessness in many of Kentucky's neighboring states including Tennessee and Ohio.[122] This number of homeless in Kentucky has declined since 2014.[122] The Kentucky Interagency Council on Homelessness is working towards an end to homelessness, their mission; to end homelessness across the state of Kentucky, with clear outlined goals and strategies on how this is going to be achieved.[123] One of their main goals is to assist local municipalities to end homelessness within the state.[123]

The director for Homeless Prevention and Intervention in Kentucky, Charlie Lanter, says that in regards to panhandling, "if they're successful, then they have no incentive to go to a shelter or to go somewhere for food, or whatever their particular needs are ..."[124] which limits the organizations ability to assist the individual off the streets. In particular, the city of Owensber has had support from its homeless shelters in protecting panhandler's rights on the streets, for example, Harry Pedigo, the director of St. Benedicts Homeless Shelter in Kentucky wants local panhandlers to know that the homeless organizations are there to help and not judge their situation.[125]

Louisiana

[edit]

Begging, panhandling and homelessness have been prevalent issues for the state of Louisiana for some time, and correlate closely with its poverty rates. Particularly since the disastrous Hurricane Katrina, which hit many Southern American states in 2005, poverty has maintained at a high level[126] The hurricane led to 1,577 deaths in Louisiana alone, with $13 billion invested in flood insurance aid.[126]

Hurricane Katrina had devastating physical, environmental, and socio-economic impacts on Louisiana. Much of Louisiana, and New Orleans in particular, is made up of African-African, elderly and veteran populations, many of whom were plunged into further poverty once their houses were damaged by floods[127] As a result, begging and panhandling in Louisiana is not just a matter of economics, but also of gender, race and age.[127] Louisiana remains the third most impoverished state in the United States, with nearly 1 in 5 people living in poverty.[128]

Begging and panhandling is now illegal in the state of Louisiana. Bill HB115 was passed first through the Louisiana Legislative House in 2014, and approved by the Senate in 2015.[129] Through the criminalization of begging, offenders can now be given fines of approximately $200, or alternatively sentenced to up to 6 months in jail.[129] The bill specifically targets homeless populations in Louisiana, and applies to prostitution, hitchhikers and the general solicitation of money.[130]

Supporters of the Bill hope that the criminalization of begging will lead to fewer homeless and poor people on the streets[129] Louisiana State Representative Austin Badone, the creator of the begging and panhandling bill, suggests that many of these people are not actually in need, and described the process of begging as a "racket."[129] Those opposed to the criminalization of begging and panhandling maintain that the law is unconstitutional, as they view begging under the category of Freedom of Speech.[131]

As a result, HB 115 has sparked social and political debate since its administration, as many argue that begging is protected under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.[132] Initially, this was said to only apply to non-aggressive forms of panhandling or begging, which do not include any use of force or threats.[132] However, the criminalization of all begging in Louisiana has called into question whether or not the bill breaches the First Amendment right.

Because of these claims, Louisiana has taken steps to showcase that the First Amendment is being protected. The city of Slidell, Louisiana voted in July 2016 to implement permits for beggars and homeless people.[133] This would legally allow begging and panhandling in certain outlined areas. If their application is approved, this permit would be valid for one year, and would be required to be displayed during panhandling and begging[133] The permit can also be denied if the applicant has previously been charged with misdemeanours such as harassment or other begging-related offences.[134] Enforcement is set to begin by local Slidell authorities in November 2016.[134]

Maine

[edit]

There are over 4,000 homeless people in Maine.

Maryland

[edit]

In 2015, it was estimated that each year over 50,000 people experience homelessness in Maryland.[135] Although Maryland is one of the nation's wealthiest states, over 50% of impoverished Marylanders live in "deep poverty", meaning that their annual income is less than half of the federally defined poverty level.[135] Homelessness in Maryland increased by 7 percent between 2014 and 2015 according to statistics released by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.[136]

Begging and associated crimes in Maryland

[edit]

Panhandling in Maryland is widely protected under the First Amendment,[137] provided that the act does not include conduct which 'harasses, menaces, intimidates, impedes traffic or otherwise causes harm'.[138][139] The president of the nonpartisan First Amendment Center has stated that any legislation prohibiting the act of begging violates the constitution by "limiting a citizen's right to ask for help".[140] In 1994, Baltimore City enacted a zero-tolerance arrest policy to counter rising violent crime rates, prompting a push to reclaim public spaces by targeting beggars and homeless persons.[141] This resulted in the case of Patton v. Baltimore City (1994), where zero-tolerance arrest policies to reclaim public spaces were ruled to be unconstitutional, due to violation of the homeless' First Amendment right to freedom of association.[141]

Traffic hazards due to roadside solicitation have been identified as a cause of concern throughout Maryland, generating various attempts by legal officials to regulate panhandling in high traffic areas.[139] As a result, solicitation or panhandling is banned on or beside state roads under state law.[139] A statewide ban on panhandling and vending at all highway intersections was proposed in 2001, but was later revised to apply only to Charles County.[142]

In 2006, the Anne Arundel County Council enacted a ban on panhandling by children under 18 years old.[143] In April 2007, the Maryland General Assembly passed a bill banning panhandling beside and on Anne Arundel County roadways, as well as prohibiting the display of political signs or advertising messages on any public roadways.[143] The American Civil Liberties Union have consistently opposed solicitation bans, due to concerns that legislation may hinder the fundraising efforts of legitimate organizations.[143] A bill has since passed the House of Delegates in 2016, allowing the act of panhandling by firefighters and non-profit groups, pending their successful completion of traffic safety courses.[144]

In late 2011, legislation was proposed in Montgomery County which would require panhandlers to seek permits in order to engage in roadside solicitation, but this proposition was heavily scrutinized due to concerns that panhandling permits could constitute a breach of the First Amendment.[139] In September 2013, Montgomery County leaders announced a plan to instead purge panhandling from busy streets by encouraging citizens to donate money to not-for-profit shelters and food banks, rather than directly donating to panhandling persons.[145]

In 2012, Allegany County imposed narrow restrictions on panhandling, allowing only one day permit per person per year for roadside solicitations.[146] Other areas of Maryland with similar permit provisions include Cecil, Frederick and Baltimore counties.[146] In 2012, certain panhandling ordinances within Frederick County revived First Amendment debates after undercover police officers donated money to begging persons and subsequently arrested them on panhandling charges.[147] Frederick County police allegedly responded by indicating that their initiative in panhandling arrests was in response to reported 'quality of life' issues.[147]

In early 2013, legislation to ban the act of panhandling in commercial districts within Baltimore was put forward, but was met with backlash by a mass of protesters chanting "homes not handcuffs".[148] A revised bill was proposed in November, stipulating that panhandling would be prohibited only within 10 feet of outdoor dining areas.[148] In response, the president of Health Care for the Homeless in Baltimore County stated that the city already had stringent anti-begging laws and that the proposed legislation would merely make it easier to arrest impoverished citizens, which would in turn create further obstacles to their future self-sufficiency.[148]

In addition to aggressive panhandling, Takoma Park Municipal Code within Montgomery County currently prohibits panhandling in "darkness" (defined as the hours between sunset and sunrise)[149] as well as the solicitation of persons in motor vehicles and in specific locations including bus stops, outdoor cafes and taxi stands.[149]

Massachusetts

[edit]

In 1969, the Pine Street Inn was founded by Paul Sullivan on Pine Street in Boston's Chinatown district and began caring for homeless destitute alcoholics.[150][151] In 1974, Kip Tiernan founded Rosie's Place in Boston, the first drop-in and emergency shelter for women in the United States, in response to the increasing numbers of needy women throughout the country.

In 1980, the Pine Street Inn had to move to larger facilities on Harrison Avenue in Boston[150][151] and in 1984, Saint Francis House had to move its operation from the St. Anthony Shrine on Arch Street to an entire ten-floor building on Boylston Street.[152]

In 1985, the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program was founded to assist the growing numbers of homeless living on the streets and in shelters in Boston and who were suffering from lack of effective medical services.[153][154]

In August 2007, in Boston, Massachusetts, the city took action to keep loiterers, including the homeless, off the Boston Common overnight after a series of violent crimes and drug arrests.[155]

In December 2007, Mayor Thomas M. Menino of Boston announced that the one-night homeless count had revealed that the actual number of homeless living on the streets was down.[156]

In October 2008, Connie Paige of The Boston Globe reported that the number of homeless in Massachusetts had reached an all-time high, primarily due to mortgage foreclosures and the national economic crisis.[157]

In October 2009, as part of the city's Leading the Way initiative, Mayor Thomas Menino of Boston dedicated and opened the Weintraub Day Center, the first city-operated day center for chronically homeless persons. It is a multi-service center providing shelter, counseling, health care, housing assistance, and other support services. It is a 3,400-square-foot (320 m2) facility located in the Woods Mullen Shelter. It is also meant to reduce the strain on the city's hospital emergency rooms by providing services and identifying health problems before they escalate into emergencies. It was funded by $3 million in grants from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD), the Massachusetts Medical Society, and Alliance Charitable Foundation,[158] and the United States Department of Health and Human Services Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).[159]

A homeless encampment adjacent to the Boston University Bridge in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

In 2010, there was a continued crackdown on panhandling in downtown Boston, especially the aggressive type. Summonses were being handed out with scheduled court appearances. The results were mixed, and in one upscale neighborhood, Beacon Hill, the resolve of the Beacon Hill Civic Association, which has received only one complaint about panhandlers, was to try to solve the bigger problem, not by criminal actions.[160]

Due to economic constraints in 2010, Governor Deval Patrick had to cut the Commonwealth of Massachusetts 2011 budget so dental care for the majority of adults, including most homeless people, covered by MassHealth (Medicaid) would no longer be provided except for cleaning and extractions, with no fillings, dentures, or restorative care.[161][162] This does not affect dental care for children. The measure took effect in July 2010 and affects an estimated 700,000 adults, including 130,000 seniors.[163]

In September 2010, it was reported that the Housing First Initiative had significantly reduced the chronic homeless single-person population in Boston, Massachusetts, although homeless families were still increasing. Some shelters were reducing the number of beds due to lowered numbers of homeless, and some emergency shelter facilities were closing, especially the emergency Boston Night Center.[164]

There is sometimes corruption and theft by the employees of a shelter, as evidenced by a 2011 investigative report by FOX 25 TV in Boston wherein several Boston public shelter employees were found stealing large amounts of food over some time from the shelter's kitchen for their private use and catering.[165][166]

In October 2017, Boston Mayor Marty Walsh announced the hire of a full-time outreach manager for the Boston Public Library (BPL), whose focus would be to work with staff to provide assessment, crisis intervention, and intensive case management services to homeless individuals who frequent the library. The position is currently based at BPL's Central Library in Copley Square and is funded through the City of Boston's Department of Neighborhood Development and the Boston Public Library, and managed in partnership with Pine Street Inn.[167]

The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic caused economic hardship for many residents, resulting in housing precarity and even homelessness for some.[168][169][170]

Michigan

[edit]

In 2014, Michigan had 97,642 homeless individuals on its streets.[171] In the VI-SPADT (Vulnerability Index and Service Prioritization Decision Assistance tool) initiated by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) alongside the Michigan State Housing Development Authority (MSHDA) it was found that 2,462 individuals had 4,564 interactions with the police between June 2014 and April 2015.[171] The 2014 VI-SPADT found that minority populations were overrepresented. 52% of the homeless population were a part of a minority group, as well as people with disabilities of long duration such as chronic health conditions, mental health/cognitive conditions and substance abuse (65%).[171]

The criminalization of panhandling in Michigan has been the subject to much debate in public opinion and in the courts:

In 2011 and 2013, Grand Rapids was the center for this debate. In 2011, the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan (ACLU) filed a federal lawsuit challenging a law that makes begging a crime as a violation of free speech.[172] Prior to this, the ACLU discovered that police officers had been arresting, prosecuting and jailing individual people for requesting financial assistance on the streets. Between 2008 and 2011, there were approximately 400 arrests made by Grand Rapids under an old law that criminalizes the act of begging – 211 of these cases resulted in jail time.[172]

The ACLU focused on the cases of two men. James Speet was arrested for holding a sign reading "Need a Job. God Bless" and Ernest Sims, a veteran, was arrested for asking for spare change for a bus fare.[173] The debate was seated in the fact that other individuals and organizations were allowed to raise funds on the streets without being charged for a crime, yet these man were jailed for the same principle.[172]

The results of these cases were positive for the ACLU side – Judge Robert Jonker ruled in 2012 that the law is unconstitutional and in 2013 the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that begging is protected speech under the First Amendment.[172] On the opposition side of this case and wider debate was the State Attorney General Bill Schuette who appealed the ruling that the state law violated the First Amendment. Schuette contended that the city and the state safety is at risk and there were concerns around pedestrian and vehicle traffic, protection of businesses and tourism, as well as fraud.[174]

The state argued that it had an interest in preventing Fraud – Schuette contended that not all who beg are legitimately homeless or use the funds they raise to meet basic needs, the money goes to alcohol and other substances. The court agreed with Schuette that preventing fraud and duress are in the interest of the state, but directly prohibiting begging does not align with the prevention of fraud as they are not necessarily intertwined.[174]

This debate resurfaced again in 2016 with the two sides again being prevention of unwanted behaviours and preservation of constitutional rights. In Battle Creek, officials passed a pair of proposals that are aimed at limiting panhandling and loitering throughout the city.[175] City commissioners were split in the vote along with the general public. Under the new ordinances the following situations could lead to legal apprehension by the police – remaining idly within 25 feet of an intersection without a license; soliciting money from anyone near building entrances, restrooms, ATMS or in line; panhandling between sunset and sunrise on public property without an official license or permit; approaching another person in a way that would cause a reasonable person to feel terrorized, intimidated or harassed; forcing oneself upon another i.e. continuing to ask for money after being turned down. Any violations can be considered civil infractions and can result in fines. The bill, aimed at targeting 'aggressive' panhandling was passed in September 2016.[175]

There are a range of implications that come along with the criminalization of begging behaviours. Jessica Vail is the program manager of the Grand Rapids Area Collation to End Homelessness and contends that it is more cost efficient for people to not be homeless and it also keeps our criminal justice system from getting overloaded.[176] Don Mitchell conducted research in 1998 on the criminalization of behaviours associated with homelessness and begging and highlighted the negative effect this has on the cycle of homelessness and crime.[177]

Criminalizing behaviours that are necessary for the survival of homeless people such as begging, sleeping and sitting in public, loitering in parks and on streets and urinating and defecating in public leads them to be subjects of the criminal justice system.[177] ACLU legislative liaison Shelli Weisberg consolidates this notion of a cyclical disadvantage in 2016 – fining people who cannot afford to pay a fine for something they cannot avoid doing and then putting them in a system where they cannot afford to defend themselves or challenge these offences questions how just the criminalization of such acts is.[178]

Minnesota

[edit]

In Minnesota, the prevalence of panhandling, solicitation and begging in relation to homelessness have been deemed to be distinctive to each city. For example, in Stevens County, administrators of social service programs unanimously agreed that rural poverty is distinguishable by location and panhandlers have a low presence in Stevens County, while a high frequency in the city of Minneapolis situated in Hennepin County.[179]

In 2013, a statewide study conducted by the Wilder Foundation on Homelessness indicated the presence of 10,214 homeless in Minnesota. The one-day count was conducted by 1,200 volunteers around 400 locations known to attract homeless such as transitional housing, shelters, drop in sites, hot meal programs and church basements. An increase of six percent in homeless were observed since the last study in 2009, while 55% of the homeless population were females and over 46% were under the age of 21.[180]

In a study conducted by St Stephen's Street Outreach staff, 55 panhandlers were surveyed in downtown Minneapolis to determine why people beg and how local police treat panhandlers. Individual responses neither collectively favoured negative or positive responses for the interaction between police and panhandlers. Examples of responses include that the police 'give you trouble', tell them to 'get the hell out of here' and 'give you a ticket', while other individuals believed that police were 'usually understanding', 'gentle' and 'very friendly and helpful'.[181]

The city council has passed an ordinance that allows those who aggressively solicit or engage in solicitation in prohibited locations to be criminally charged.[182] Minnesota state law does not prohibit passive panhandling, such as holding a sign without verbal interaction and focuses on aggressive panhandling as a breach of the law. Other cities in Minnesota such as Rochester, Brooklyn Center and St Paul have similar versions of the ordinance and have all avoided judicial scrutiny on the grounds of protecting individual privacy against assault based behaviour.[183]

Efforts by the population of Minnesota to redirect the money given to panhandlers to organizations that aim to end homelessness have been implemented in the city of Minneapolis. An example of this is 'Give Real Change', a campaign that began in 2009 with the aim to end homelessness for 300 to 500 people in areas within Minneapolis by the end of 2025. Billboards implemented by the campaign that display 'Say NO To Panhandling and YES To Giving,' urge community members to stop giving money to beggars and alternatively donate it to an organization that allocates money to shelters to end homelessness. The executive director of St Stephens Human Services, Gail Dorfman is a supporter of the initiative and believes that it can act as a long-term solution for homelessness.[184]

In 2020, the City of Minneapolis featured officially and unofficially designated camp sites in city parks for people experiencing homelessness that operated from June 13, 2020, to January 7, 2021. The emergence of encampments on public property in Minneapolis was the result of pervasive homelessness, mitigations measures related to the COVID-19 pandemic in Minnesota, local unrest after the murder of George Floyd, and an experimental policy of the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board that permitted encampments.[185]

At its peak in the summer of 2020, there were thousands of people camping at dozens of park sites across the city. Many of the encampment residents came from outside of Minneapolis to live in the parks.[186] By the end of the permit experiment, four people had died in the city's park encampments,[186] including the city's first homicide victim of 2021, who was stabbed to death inside a tent at Minnehaha Park on January 3, 2021.[187]

Mississippi

[edit]

In 2016, there were at least 1,738 homeless people in Mississippi, according to the 2016 Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress prepared by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development.[188] This number is likely to be much greater as this survey only provides a snapshot of homelessness rates at the time of data collection in January 2016. Although homeless people in Mississippi comprise less than 1% of the total US homeless population and there has been a 37% reduction in the number of homeless people in Mississippi from 2010 figures, the state has a comparably high rate of unsheltered homeless people (50%) which is only surpassed by US states such as California, Oregon, Hawaii and Nevada.[188] The state has the second highest rate of unsheltered homeless veterans in the country (60%) and the fourth highest rate of unsheltered homelessness for people with a disability (84%).[188]

Anti-panhandling laws

[edit]

High rates of homeless people living without suitable accommodation and in public areas creates greater awareness of their presence both by the local community and policing agencies and has resulted in the introduction of laws directed against acts associated with homelessness, otherwise known as vagrancy including begging or panhandling. While in most US states such legislation is primarily enacted and included in city ordinances rather than state law, in Mississippi, the 2015 Mississippi Code provides for a specific definition of vagrancy that allows for "able-bodied persons who go begging for a livelihood" to be punished as vagrants as they are seen to be committing crimes against public peace and security.[189]

Title 99, Chapter 29 of the Code mandates law enforcement officers to arrest known vagrants with those deemed 'vagrant' subjected to fines for a first offence and up to six months imprisonment and the payment of court costs for subsequent offences.[190] These definitions and penalties for homelessness have remained largely unchanged historically in the state of Mississippi which has tended to define vagrants to include those living in idleness or without employment and having no means of support, prostitutes, gamblers as well as beggars.[191]

Those who fall under these population groups continue to be defined as vagrants under the 2015 Mississippi Code.[192] Controversially, such wide and discriminatory definitions have been tied to Mississippi's poor race relations with African Americans with vagrancy legislation in the latter half of the 19th century linked to "keeping black people in their rightful place" on the slave plantations.[193]

As a consequence, Mississippi's 'Black Code' on vagrancy applied in a racially discriminatory manner to African Americans such as ex-slaves and 'idle blacks' as well as white Americans who associated themselves with African Americans.[194] While Mississippi was the first US state to enact such discriminatory and punitive legislation against African Americans, it was certainly not the last, with states including South Carolina, Alabama and Louisiana following Mississippi's lead with similar 'Black Code' legislation in 1865 that targeted homeless ex-slaves.[193]

In Jackson, Mississippi's largest city, begging or panhandling is specifically prohibited under the definition of "commercial solicitation". Begging is banned within 15 feet of public toilets, automatic teller machines (ATMs), parking lots, outdoor eating areas, pay telephones, bus stops, subway stations and entirely within the central business district.[195] Begging is banned after sunset and before sunrise and it is unlawful to "aggressive solicit" by blocking the path of another person, following another person, using abusive language or making a statement or gesture that would cause fear by a reasonable person.[195]

Penalties for a first offence include a warning, citation or seven days community service, subject to law enforcement and prosecutor discretion. For subsequent offences, penalties may include up to 30 days community service, a $1,000 fine or up to 30 days imprisonment.[195] However, passive solicitation is not unlawful. This means that simply holding a sign asking for money is not illegal and in fact, is protected by the Jackson city ordinance that prohibits panhandling. Similar legislation that prohibits begging is also in place in Mississippi's second largest city, Gulfport.[196]

In July 2012, Jackson City Councilman Quentin Whitwell proposed tripling existing fines and implementing longer jail sentences for panhandling in response to heightened community concern about aggressive panhandlers and an escalating panhandling "epidemic".[197] However, this proposal was later rejected by the Jackson City Council amidst concerns from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Mississippi that prohibiting panhandling under city ordinances may violate First Amendment rights under the US Constitution that protect freedom of speech.[198]

On the streets of Jackson, for people experiencing homelessness such as Raymond Quarles, city ordinances such as those originally proposed to prohibit begging increase their susceptibility to counter-productive law enforcement attention and policing activity. For instance, Raymond was arrested at least 10 times in as little as one month in Jackson shortly after experiencing homelessness from the combined effects of relationship breakdown, financial stress and a deterioration in physical health. What Raymond and the ACLU call for are additional support services to assist homeless community members find employment, housing and other support services rather than a "revolving door of crime" and entry into the criminal justice system that is perpetuated through simplistic bans on panhandling and other associated acts of vagrancy.[198]

While the US Supreme Court has not decisively decided on this issue and there is considerable debate as to whether begging constitutes conduct or speech, Fraser (2010) suggests that begging is likely to constitute speech and therefore blanket bans on begging in public areas enacted by local governments as in the case of Mississippi cities such as Jackson and Gulfport are likely to be unconstitutional and in breach of the First Amendment.[199]

Montana

[edit]

Nebraska

[edit]

In 2016, over 10,000 people were considered to be living without permanent accommodation in Nebraska, with a little over half of those situated in Omaha and a quarter in the state's capitol of Lincoln.[200] According to The University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Centre on Children, Families and Law a little over half of Nebraska's homeless population is situated in Omaha and a quarter in Lincoln with the balance in spread over the rest of the state.[200] Approximately 10 percent of those homeless in Nebraska are considered 'chronically homeless' and have either been homeless for an entire year or homeless four times in a three-year period.[200] Such statistics have prompted the Nebraskan Government to implement a newly revised 10-year plan for dealing with homelessness which a vision of '[supporting] a statewide Continuum of Care that coordinates services provided to all people and that promotes safe, decent, affordable, and appropriate housing resulting in healthy and viable Nebraskan communities'.[201]

Charles Coley, executive director of the Metro Area Coalition of Care of the Homeless and member of the Nebraska Commission on Housing and Homelessness said that '[the commission] chose to strategically to align [their] goals with the goals of the federal strategic plan to prevent homelessness'.[202] Coley further stated that the 'four goals are end chronic homelessness, secondarily end veteran homelessness, thirdly end child/family and youth homeless and then finally set a path to reducing overall homelessness'. Of those currently living without permanent accommodation in Nebraska, a portion of those are Veterans and those fleeing domestic violence.[202]

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits 'the making of any law respecting an establishment of religion, ensuring that there is no prohibition on the free exercise of religion and abridging the freedom of speech'. In the United States, Panhandling is typically protected by the First Amendment as one has the right to free speech with many states and cities respecting citizen's right to free speech and allowing panhandling.[203] In the Nebraskan city of Omaha, panhandling is currently illegal.[204] Previously, the Omaha Panhandling Ordinance stipulated that 'anyone who wants to solicit money – other than a religious organization or a charity – must obtain written permission from the police chief' with religious organizations and charities protected under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.[204]

As of December 2015, Omaha's current panhandling ordinance states that aggressive panhandling, such as approaching someone several times to ask for money or touching them without consent, is punishable by imprisonment or fine.[205] The new Omaha ordinance also outlaws other particular forms of panhandling including asking for money within 15 feet of an ATM or other location where money is dispensed, following someone to ask them for money, panhandling on private property such as going to someone's front door and asking for money, and panhandling in street traffic.[204][205]

The American Civil Liberties Union has raised numerous concerns over Omaha's previous and current panhandling ordinance as it was a violation of the First Amendment and entered negotiations with the City Attorney's Office about their unconstitutional ordinances.[205] The City Council however did not back down from their stance on panhandling, stating that they originally wanted to implement a blanket ban on the practice as it is a safety hazard and must place the safety of their citizens first.[205]

As a response to Omaha's panhandling ordinance, the Open Door Mission[205] has begun to pass out 'compassion cards' for people to give panhandlers instead of money. The cards resemble a business card which guides the individuals to the Open Door Mission and the services they provide including shelter, food, transportation, clothes and toiletries, and are able to pick people up from the corner of 14th and Douglas Streets.[205]

Nevada

[edit]

New Jersey

[edit]

Begging laws in the state of New Jersey are determined by the ordinances set by each local government. Depending on where an individual is begging the rules and punishments can vary greatly. For example, in Middle Township, it is prohibited to aggressively beg within 100 feet of an ATM, with a first offence punishable by up to a $250 fine, 30 days jail and 5 days community service.[206] Whereas, in New Brunswick, all begging within 25 feet of any bank or ATM is considered aggressive begging, which allows police to issue a cease and desist notice. Failure to comply with the notice may incur a $50 fine for each day of being in violation.[207]

In 2013, the local governments of Middle Township and Atlantic City reached national headlines for passing ordinances that require individuals to register for a free yearly permit before being allowed to beg for money in public.[208][209] Local officials and lawmakers of Middle Township adopted the ordinance in response to complaints from the public in relation to the forceful and persistent tactics used by some panhandlers.[210] However, these begging permits did not last with Middle Township passing amendments that remove the need for permits,[211] and Atlantic City also repealing the permit requirement in April 2016.[212]

The constitutionality of anti-begging laws are contested. Bill Dressel of the New Jersey Coalition to End Homelessness explains that "it's a complicated area of the law – it's in flux".[213] Recent judicial decisions in the US Supreme Court have challenged local ordinances that prohibit or regulate panhandling in a way that is too vague. Since the decision of Reed v Town of Gilbert the courts have largely struck down panhandling bans on the grounds that they inappropriately limit the content of the speech of individuals that are panhandling.[214] Supporters of anti-begging laws argue that these ordinances do not curtail free speech as they only seek to regulate the manner of begging rather than what is being said.[215]

In 2015, John Fleming, a wheelchair-confined homeless man was arrested in New Brunswick and charged with 'disorderly conduct' for sitting on the sidewalk with a sign that read "BROKE – PLEASE HELP – GOD BLESS YOU – THANK YOU".[216][217] The New Jersey chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU–NJ) successfully challenged the local ordinance on the grounds it violated a person's First Amendment right to free expression.[218] Deputy legal director of ACLU–NJ, Jeanne LoCicero, explained that panhandling, from a constitutional standpoint, is no different from a Girl Scout troop soliciting cookie sales or collecting signatures on a petition.[219] Thus, merely targeting panhandling is problematic as it seeks to prohibit the content of the speech and not the manner of speech. The City of New Brunswick agreed to settle the case by repealing the two ordinances – one that required a permit for begging and another banning unauthorised begging – as there were "legitimate concerns regarding the constitutionality of the Ordinances".[220]

In Paterson, alleged panhandlers arrested by police are given the chance, after being fingerprinted, to engage with social service programs that address their particular needs.[221] Paterson's Police Director, Jerry Speziale, says that the initiative is a "new way to address those in need and enhance the quality of life for all".[222] However, community views on panhandling is vexed, with some Paterson council members calling upon the police to crack down on those whom have dropped out of rehabilitation programs and resumed begging. Paterson Councilman, Alex Mendez, raised that it is an issue of weak enforcement and repeated targeting of panhandlers would eliminate the problem.[223]

An ongoing police crackdown on panhandling was launched in Newark, in July 2016, seeking to deter panhandling in busy areas of the city.[224] Newark Police Director, Anthony Ambrose, said the days of leniency were over, "a panhandler definitely isn't a welcoming sight ... [t]hese operations will continue until the panhandlers get the message". Civil rights activists question the legality of the crackdown, citing the successful case of John Fleming and ACLU-NJ in challenging unconstitutional prohibitions on begging.[225]

New Mexico

[edit]

Homelessness is a serious issue throughout the state of New Mexico. Through a demographic examination it becomes evident that New Mexico has a high proportion of ethnographies that are currently and historically socioeconomically disadvantaged.[226] Only Alaska has a higher ratio of Native Americans, and it has a large Hispanic population. Homelessness is a direct cause from an individual not being able to provide themselves with the most basic of necessities to maintain a healthy life hence having a higher proportion of individuals in poverty places a greater risk of an individual becoming homeless.

New Mexico's homeless population is largely concentrated in Albuquerque, thought Las Cruces and Santa Fe. According to the most recent Point-in-Time Report by the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness a total of at least 2,740 people were counted as unhoused (unsheltered, living in an emergency shelter, or living in transitional housing) in Albuquerque, and 1,909 were counted as unhoused throughout the rest of the state. The sum of 4,649 is an undercount because of the limitations of the Point-in-Time counting method, and estimates vary on the exact number. [227]

New York

[edit]

In 1979, a New York City lawyer, Robert Hayes, brought a class action suit before the courts, Callahan v. Carey, against the City and State, arguing for a person's state constitutional "right to shelter". It was settled as a consent decree in August 1981. The City and State agreed to provide board and shelter to all homeless men who met the need standard for welfare or who were homeless by certain other standards. By 1983 this right was extended to homeless women.

In March 2013, the New York City Department of Homeless Services reported that the sheltered homeless population consisted of:[228]

  • 27,844 adults
  • 20,627 children
  • 48,471 total individuals

According to the Coalition for the Homeless, the homeless population of New York rose to an all-time high in 2011. A reported 113,552 people slept in the city's emergency shelters last year, including over 40,000 children, marking an 8 percent increase from the previous year and a 37 percent increase from 2002. There was also a rise in the number of families relying on shelters, approximately 29,000. That is an increase of 80% from 2002. About half of the people who slept in shelter in 2010 returned for housing in 2011.[229][230]

North Carolina

[edit]

Ohio

[edit]

The 2022 Annual Homelessness Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress, produced by The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, estimated that 10,654 Ohioans faced homelessness during the year, representing 9 in every 10,000 individuals. Over 80% of the homeless were sheltered, one of the better rates in the nation. This population is made up of 3,214 people who belonged to families with children, 703 unaccompanied youth, 633 veterans, and 1,023 chronically homeless individuals.

Ohio ranks as one of the states with lower rates of homelessness and has a strong support system in place for the homeless population. Although unchanged in recent years, the homeless population in Ohio has seen a 5.4% decrease since 2007. Since 2007, Ohio has seen the fourth largest decrease in chronic homelessness, with 1,285, or 55.7%, of the chronically homeless population escaping the cycle.

Oklahoma

[edit]

Oregon

[edit]

Pennsylvania

[edit]

Rhode Island

[edit]

In June 2012, Governor Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island signed a bill into law that gives homeless people in that state some clearer rights than before.[231][clarification needed]

South Carolina

[edit]

South Dakota

[edit]

Tennessee

[edit]

The act of 'aggressive panhandling' was criminalized in 2015.[232] In recent years, there has been an apparent push for the need to implement anti-panhandling laws across America. It is believed that this is a result of adverse effects of the Great Recession, particularly foreclosure.[233] Under the Tennessee Code, the act of 'aggressive panhandling' is classified as a criminal offence punishable by a fine and/or jail.[234] Per the Code, 'aggressive panhandling' is committed if an individual, while requesting money or donations:

  • intentionally touches a person without their consent
  • obstructs a person or their vehicle
  • follows a person after they refuse to give a donation
  • acts in manner that would cause a 'reasonable person' to feel threatened should they refuse to provide a donation.[234]

The severity of the punishment greatly depends on whether an individual has previously violated the Code. A first offence, classified as a Class C misdemeanour, could result in a maximum fine of $50 and/or up to 30 days in jail.[235] A second offence, classified as a Class B misdemeanour, could increase this penalty to a maximum fine of $500 and/or up to 6 months in jail.[235] While the Tennessee Code is written in very broad and general terms, several city ordinances, most of which were enacted before the Tennessee Code, provide specific restraints on the actions of panhandlers.

Memphis

[edit]

In October 2016, the Memphis City Council voted to extend the ban on panhandling to between 5pm and 10am and to also extend the areas that panhandling is prohibited.[236] Councillor Philip Spinosa Jr. declared that this extension entirely relates to public safety.[236] He stated that the new ordinance was designed to encompass morning and evening rush hours and to make popular begging areas, such as intersections, construction zones, ramps and bridges safer for all involved. In addition to the fines, the police are empowered with the option to charge the panhandler with a misdemeanor crime of obstructing the highway.[236]

The president of Homeless Organizing for Power and Equality expressed disappointment of this decision.[236] Memphis Police Director Mike Rallings agreed that while panhandling is a public safety issue, he still believes that the imposition of fines is highly ineffective as most panhandlers, most of whom are homeless, are unable to pay the fine.[237]

In response to the strict anti-panhandling laws in place in Memphis, a local not-for-profit organization, Hospitality Hub in partnership with the Memphis City Council has launched a 'Work Local' program.[238] This program aims to reduce poverty in Memphis by offering temporary clean-up work.[238]

Texas

[edit]

Half of the homeless population of the U.S. reside in one of five states (in 2020), with Texas having the fourth largest population at 27,000 and California having the largest at 151,000.[239] Begging has been criminalized in a number of regions in the state of Texas. According to the U.S. United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, Texas has seen a decrease of 2.4% in total homelessness since 2015.[239] In 2020, there were over 25,000 homeless individuals. Of this large population, 7,163 are people in families with children, 1,309 are unaccompanied youths and 1,768 are veterans.[239] Over 3,000 of the homeless population are chronically homeless individuals.[239]

In February 2016, the Dallas Police Department implemented an attack on panhandling in the central area of the city, as announced by Deputy Chief Gary Tittle[240] Because there is controversy around the issue of criminalizing panhandling, the target of the police operation was defined as "that aggressive panhandler, the one approaching an individual demanding money, asking for money, impeding their walkway on the sidewalks, getting out into the street, on the curbs, moving out into the highway from the shoulder of the highway"[240]

The crackdown on panhandling and homeless in Texas partially stems from the costs associated, as the cost of healthcare is estimated to be at least $23, 223 per homeless person per year, according to the University of Texas.[241] Taxpayers are further paying for the costs of the homeless through the expenses involved with the criminal justice system.[241] These costs are heightened as individuals who are homeless are more often than not convicted for misdemeanours and non-violent offences such as sleeping in public places, loitering, panhandling and trespassing.[242]

The rate of homelessness across the U.S. decreased overall by .6 per 10,000 from 2014 to 2015.[243] The majority of states in the U.S. experienced decreases of homelessness in every major subpopulation mentioned, including families, veterans, unaccompanied youths and individuals who experience chronic homelessness.[243]

Though a number of States in the U.S., including Texas, have implemented panhandling bans, these have not occurred without their legitimacy being challenged regarding the Constitution.[244] However, San Francisco had effective legislation for prosecution of people found panhandling but this legislation was later found unconstitutional by a federal court in the case of Blair v. Shanahan (1991). It was found that it was a violation of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.[244] The federal Constitution protects the right to panhandle under free speech clauses, as seen in San Francisco but not Texas due to the laws implemented early 2016[240]

In 2021, the Texas State Legislature passed a bill that bans homeless encampments on certain public properties. This was mainly in response to the city of Austin allowing public camping which created concerns of public safety, health, and pollution.[245] After this ban, those who had been living in encampments were forced to find other arrangements or else they would be fined $500.[246] During the COVID-19 pandemic, many people were faced with unemployment and fell into homelessness.[247] As of 2023, there are around 27,229 homeless individuals in Texas.[248]

There are several certain groups of people who struggle with homelessness in Texas. One of these groups is veterans. This is due to the fact that they struggle with mental health issues and substance abuse problems more than the average population. There was a 19% increase in homeless veterans across the state in 2023.[249]

An unsheltered man laying down on the sidewalk in northern Houston, 2015

Houston

[edit]

Houston is located in Harris County, which holds the largest population in Texas.[250] The Houston, Texas area has a civility ordinance affecting the Downtown Central Business District, Midtown Houston, and the Montrose/Neartown area where panhandling and loitering is illegal – this also includes public feeding of the homeless. Elevated highways around the Downtown Houston CBD area (U.S. 59/Interstate 69 adjacent to the George R. Brown Convention Center, Pierce Elevated, and a section of U.S. 59 east of Spur 527 have perimeter fencing where the homeless once congregated.

In Harris county, substance use accounts for less than 10% of homelessness and economic crises, like job loss or bill increases, account for more than 50% of homelessness.[251] In 2023, interviews from a local Houston Homelessness Coalition found that 41% of unsheltered persons had been homeless for 3 years or longer, while only 12% of the interviewees were newly homeless.[251] 73% of those experiencing homelessness in 2023 were 25–64 years old, with 14% being under 18 years old and 6% being either greater than 65 years old, or between 18 and 24 years old.[251]

Utah

[edit]

In Utah, begging or panhandling is not a crime.[252] The first amendment right protects people to ask for money, help or employment on the streets – this includes panhandling or begging.[252] Following a lawsuit in 2010 three homeless persons were fined for begging and they took the matter to court and won.[252] The court found that fining people for asking for money violated their right to free speech, thus infringing upon the first amendment.[253]

In 2010, Salt Lake City agreed not to enforce the state panhandling restriction and therefore law enforcement were not allowed to ticket homeless people panhandling alongside motorways or begging on the street.[253] However, the first amendment right only protects the panhandler if they are on sidewalks or on the side of the roadways – if you get caught panhandling in the road ways, it's a misdemeanour charge that can cost up to $100 or more depending on how many times you get caught. This is because it's a safety issue and people are often hit at traffic lights when they turn green.[253]

Homelessness and panhandling in Utah was a major issue in 2005, and the city implemented a 10-year plan hoping to eradicate homelessness by 2015.[254] Though they have not completely stopped homelessness, the state has been extremely successful at reducing homelessness by 91%.[255] In 2005 there were over 1,932 chronically homeless persons in Utah and in 2015 this figure has dropped to a staggering 178 people.[255] However, unlike many other states across the U.S., the state government did not implement hardline laws to breakdown its homelessness problem through fining, prosecuting or 'moving on'; but implemented a simple solution to the complex problem which was the 'housing first' program.[256]

The primary focus was to put homeless people into housing first, and then help them deal with the underlying issues that made them became homeless from addictions, mental health and health care.[257] The last step is then to help them find employment. Studies have shown investing in homes for the homeless actually saves money in the long run.[257]

It cost approximately $19,208 a year for the state to take care of its homeless people. This is through hospital visits, time in custody, shelter time and ambulance callouts.[258] In comparison, it only cost approximately $7,800 a year for the state to provide a house and holistic case management.[258] Critics say this solution may intensify laziness, however residents need to pay rent which is 30% of their income or $50 a month, whatever amount is greater.[257]

A reason behind the Utah success in eliminating homelessness can be attributed to an array of factors.[259] Comparatively to other states such as California, Utah is quite small with a total population of 2,995,919 residents. It is one of the least densely populated states in the U.S. Utah has the 14th highest median average income and remarkably has the least income inequality of any U.S. state.[260] Comparatively, homelessness in San Francisco is a major current issue. This is because it's the second most densely populated city in USA with large income inequality due to high rent and cost of living therefore making it a lot more difficult to implement the 'housing first' model of Utah.[260] Overall, Utah has been quite progressive in its response to panhandling and begging, firstly by not considering it a crime and secondly by implementing the successful housing first program.

Vermont

[edit]

Vermont has one of the highest rates of homelessness in the United States.[261]

Virginia

[edit]

Regulation of panhandling in Virginia typically restricts panhandling that occurs on a roadway or obstructs traffic.[262][263]

The city of Manassas, Virginia goes into more detail about its definitions around panhandling regulations. Specifically, it prohibits an aggressive manner which is explained as the persistent requesting of money after the person being solicited has made a negative response that induces some sort of fear or intimidation.[264] It further prohibits intentionally blocking or interfering with the passage of another person, and abusive language or gestures.[264] The city of Manassas also lists a number of intersections that prohibits panhandling within 150 feet.[264]

Other cities in Virginia vary in their regulations, for example, the City of Colonial Heights takes a preventative approach, although it does not state specifically how it would work to provide the prevention of street begging, whether through law enforcement or social assistance policies.[265] The Lee County, Virginia, in Jonesville, has a much stronger approach in their legislation aiming to 'restrain and punish' begging.[266] Tazewell County, Virginia[267] and the City of Buena Vista, Virginia[268] both merely state that begging is prohibited without expanding much further.

In some counties in Virginia, there was discussion proposals to introduce permits for panhandlers. Permits proposed would be required for people verbally asking for donations, as well as actions and behaviours requesting donations within a public space.[252] The idea has been quite contentious.

Some media reports reflect calls for increased enforcement of laws against panhandlers,[269] and others report that the ban on panhandling in public spaces is against the civil liberties of individuals, and unconstitutional as it infringes on the First Amendment.[270] In regards to the permit proposal, community opinion was split, with some calling strongly for the implementation of a $25 permit that would need to be carried by panhandlers.[271] The proposal is yet to be approved, with many opposing the idea, questioning where people would be able to get the money and documents required to purchase the permit, who would be allowed to attain a permit and who would be excluded, and how these permits would restrict the accessibility, and monitor the livelihoods of, panhandlers.[271]

A lot of the calls for increasing panhandling restrictions are reporting that it is for the safety of people engaging in panhandling, and for motorists in regards to begging on motorways.[271] However, the Arlington Police Department in Virginia reportedly discouraged citizens from giving to panhandlers in the area, in that "there's no telling what the cash will be used for".[272] While many are discouraging giving to panhandlers on motorways due to the context of 'risk', they also appear to portray an underlining negative bias and view of illegitimacy toward people who engage in panhandling. As police in some counties cannot directly arrest someone for begging, the Arlington Police Department note that they do arrest panhandlers for other offences for jaywalking and other traffic related offences.[272] This was mirrored in a media article in Chesterfield, VA, where it was reported in 2011 that 14 panhandlers were arrested for steeping on to the street under traffic offenses.[273]

The laws and regulations in Virginia are incredibly varied, making it difficult for panhandlers to know their rights and legitimacy in the area, particularly if one does not have access to the resources in order to find this information. Even within the legislation, the definitions and language tend to be of a broad and very subjective nature. There are also conflicting motivations for further restricting panhandling in the area, with discourses around both the safety as well as the legitimacy of panhandling taking place, particularly in the local media.

Washington state

[edit]

Begging is protected under the First Amendment, but certain Washington cities have attempted to find ambiguities in this right to freedom of speech, while others use more discretion when it comes to panhandling.

The city of Tacoma has passed laws which have quashed any form of panhandling in public forums. Panhandling is banned anywhere which is within 15 feet of ATMs, bus stops, pay phones, parked cars, gas stations, outdoor stations, cafes and carwashes within the city.[274] More specifically, it is illegal on buses, freeway ramps and on intersections. In the hours between sunset and sunrise, it is prohibited entirely. Those who are found to be in breach of this ordinance could be penalized with 90 days in jail or be fined $1000.[274] While the city of Arlington's laws are not as strict, with panhandling being banned anywhere within 300 feet of these certain areas, violators too can be met with the same harsh forms of punishment.[275]

A more controversial law was passed in October 2015, when the city of Everett amended previous code which categorised 'aggressive panhandling' as a misdemeanor.[276] This law prevented begging 'in a manner that hinders or obstructs the free passage of any person in a public place' or begging that 'intentionally causes or attempts to cause another person to reasonably fear imminent bodily harm or the commission of a criminal act upon their person, or upon property in their immediate possession.'[277] The passing of the law has been met with mass condemnation, with many critics saying it criminalizes homelessness, while the ACLU called it 'unconstitutional, ineffective and unnecessarily costly and punitive.'[276]

Further opposition to criminalizing begging was demonstrated when the city of Lakewood's anti-panhandling ordinance was deemed unconstitutional in the case City of Lakewood v. Robert W. Willis.[278] Laws were considered 'overbroad' by the courts as they restrict panhandling in several locations without seeing if there is actually obstruction of traffic. This case has also led to a discussion surrounding whether to charge an individual with obstructing traffic or with begging.

The city of Olympia has constructed several tiny home villages as temporary or permanent housing solutions, such as Quixote Village.[279]

City of Seattle

[edit]

The city of Seattle's stance on panhandling is not as hardline as many other cities in Washington. For example, in 2010 an amendment was sponsored which would enable stronger panhandling laws that included a regulation against 'intimidating words and gestures' and obstructing someone's walking path.[280] A $50 fine was proposed to be the punishment for anyone found to be 'aggressively panhandling.' While the bill was initially passed, Mayor Mike McGinn vetoed the bill. Yet despite this opposition to a call for certain regulations on panhandling, Mayor Ed Murray believed that it is imperative that existing laws are enforced. These laws were enacted in 1987 and they are effectively an ordinance against aggressive panhandling. While this does represent similarities with Everett's laws, the laws in Seattle have been seen as largely discretionary and 'feel good legislation' which have been viewed ambiguously.[280]

West Virginia

[edit]

Wisconsin

[edit]
Homeless encampment in La Crosse, Wisconsin along the marsh trails

Territories and Washington D.C.

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
by state refers to the geographic distribution of individuals and households without fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residences, as quantified through the U.S. Department of and Urban Development's (HUD) annual Point-in-Time (PIT) estimates, which reveal stark interstate disparities driven by differences in costs, suitability for outdoor living, and local frameworks. In January 2024, HUD's PIT count recorded 771,480 people experiencing nationwide, marking an 18% increase from 2023 and the highest total since systematic tracking began. hosted the largest absolute number, exceeding 187,000 individuals, while New York followed closely, together accounting for a substantial portion of the national figure. rates varied widely, with and New York exhibiting the highest among states at over 60 and 50 per 10,000 residents respectively, contrasted by Mississippi's rate below 5 per 10,000. These patterns highlight concentrations of unsheltered in mild-weather states like those on the West Coast, where over 60% of the unsheltered population resides, often linked to challenges in enforcing regulations and providing adequate behavioral health interventions.

National Overview

The 2024 Point-in-Time (PIT) count, conducted by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), estimated 771,480 people experiencing on a single night in January 2024, marking an 18.1% increase from 653,104 in 2023 and representing approximately 23 individuals per 10,000 population nationwide. This rise reversed a temporary decline during the , when federal aid including eviction moratoriums and emergency rental assistance reduced counts to a low of around 580,000 in 2020, followed by steady increases amid the expiration of those programs. Key trends included a 6.9% surge in unsheltered , the highest recorded level, alongside a 39.4% jump in affecting 259,473 people, including 149,000 children (up 33%). Chronic rose 6.6% to 152,585 individuals, with 65% unsheltered. HUD attributes these shifts to factors such as shortages of , rising , the end of pandemic-era supports, , and influxes of migrants straining shelter systems in certain areas. Increases occurred in 43 states, with notable spikes in New York (+53%) and (+87%, partly linked to wildfires). At the state level, California reported the highest raw number at 187,084 (48 per 10,000), followed by New York at 158,019 (81 per 10,000), together accounting for over one-third of the national total. Western states like (66% unsheltered) and (62%) exhibited elevated unsheltered rates, contrasting with lower proportions in colder climates. had the lowest rate at under 5 per 10,000.
StateHomeless Population (2024 PIT)Rate per 10,000% Change from 2023
187,08448+23%
New York158,01981+53%
~31,000 (est.)~13+10%
~25,000 (est.)~8+5%
PIT counts, while standardized, rely on local enumerations and may undercount hidden populations, particularly unsheltered individuals in rural areas. Despite methodological consistency, year-over-year comparisons highlight a post-2022 acceleration in homelessness amid economic pressures.

Demographic Characteristics

In 2024, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) estimated that 771,480 people experienced on a single night in , based on point-in-time (PIT) counts conducted by local continuums of care. Of these, approximately 59.6% were men or boys (459,568 individuals), 39.2% were women or girls (302,660), and 1.2% identified as other genders, including or non-binary (9,252). This gender distribution reflects a consistent pattern where males comprise the majority, though the proportion of females has risen in recent years amid increases in . Age demographics show a broad spread, with adults aged 25-44 accounting for nearly 39% of the total (300,708 individuals), followed by those under 18 at 19.2% (148,238, primarily in family households) and those 55 and older at 19% (146,154). Unaccompanied aged 18-24 represented 7.5% (57,640), marking a 10% increase from 2023. Older adults, particularly those 55-64 (104,007) and 65+ (42,147), comprised 18.9% combined, with nearly half of this group unsheltered, highlighting vulnerabilities in aging populations. PIT counts, while comprehensive, may undercount transient or hidden subpopulations, potentially skewing age estimates. Racial and ethnic breakdowns indicate overrepresentation of certain groups relative to their shares in the general U.S. population: Black or African American individuals alone constituted 29.5% (227,769), compared to about 13.6% of the national population; Hispanic, Latino, Latina, or Latine individuals alone were 20.1% (155,146), aligning closely with the 19% national figure but elevated when including multi-racial Hispanic identifiers (up to 30.6% total Hispanic any race); and non-Hispanic White individuals alone were 31.7% (244,280), below their 59% national share. These figures stem from updated HUD data standards implemented in 2024, which expanded categories to capture more nuanced self-identifications, though comparability with prior years is limited. Household composition was predominantly individual adults at 66.4% (512,007), with making up 33.6% (259,473 households, including 148,238 children). homelessness surged 39% from 2023, driven by inflows from doubled-up or / stays amid shortages. Veterans numbered 32,882 (4.3% of total homeless), down 8% from prior year, with 88.8% male and overrepresentation of veterans (30.1% vs. 12% of veteran population). Chronically homeless individuals, defined by HUD as those with disabilities experiencing long-term or repeated , totaled 152,585 (33% of individual adults), with two-thirds unsheltered. Sheltered affected 64.5% (497,256), while 35.5% (274,224) were unsheltered, with the latter disproportionately including adult males and those with chronic conditions.
Demographic CategoryPercentage of Total HomelessNumber (2024 PIT)
Gender
Men/Boys59.6%459,568
Women/Girls39.2%302,660
Other1.2%9,252
Race (Alone)
White31.7%244,280
Black/African American29.5%227,769
Hispanic/Latino etc.20.1%155,146
Household Type
Individuals66.4%512,007
Families w/ Children33.6%259,473

Causal Factors from Empirical Data

Empirical analyses consistently identify shortages of affordable housing as a primary structural driver of homelessness, with states exhibiting higher median rents and cost-of-living indices—predominantly influenced by housing expenses—showing elevated per capita homelessness rates. A 2023 study across U.S. states found the cost of living index, where housing comprises the largest component, to be the strongest predictor of state-level homelessness variation, outperforming factors like poverty rates or unemployment. Similarly, urban areas with rent burdens exceeding 30% of median income experience homelessness rates up to five times higher than comparable low-cost regions, based on 2023 city-level data. Individual vulnerabilities, particularly untreated mental illness and substance use disorders, exhibit strong associations with chronic and unsheltered homelessness in national surveys. In the 2024 point-in-time counts, 22% of adults experiencing reported , while 18% had substance use disorders, with overlap in over 30% of cases involving co-occurring conditions. Peer-reviewed literature from 2023-2025 emphasizes these factors' prominence, noting that individuals with severe issues face 2-3 times higher odds of due to impaired functionality and service gaps, independent of housing costs alone. Policy-induced constraints on supply, such as ordinances, amplify affordability crises by limiting multifamily and low-income unit . Empirical modeling indicates that states with stringent land-use regulations—prohibiting dense or affordable developments in over 70% of residential zones—correlate with 20-40% higher rates than those with permissive policies, as evidenced by 2023 analyses of regulatory stringency indices. Weak income supports and protections further exacerbate risks, with low-income households in states lacking robust rental assistance facing eviction rates tied to 15-25% of new entries per federal tracking data. Poverty and economic instability contribute, though their explanatory power diminishes when controlling for housing and behavioral health variables; for instance, states with similar poverty levels but divergent enforcement show twofold differences in homelessness prevalence. While some advocacy-oriented reports prioritize systemic factors and underemphasize personal agency deficits—potentially reflecting institutional biases toward structural narratives—disaggregated data from HUD and NIH sources affirm that integrated interventions addressing both supply shortages and / treatment yield the strongest reductions in rates.

Federal Influences and National Policy Debates

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) serves as the primary federal agency addressing homelessness, administering grants for emergency shelters, transitional housing, and permanent supportive housing through programs such as the Continuum of Care (CoC) and Emergency Solutions Grants (ESG), authorized under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act of 1987 and expanded by the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing (HEARTH) Act of 2009. The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) coordinates multi-agency efforts via the "All In" strategic plan, launched in 2022, which emphasizes rapid rehousing and supportive services to reduce homelessness by 25% by 2025, though point-in-time (PIT) counts reported 653,000 homeless individuals in 2023, the highest since 2007. Federal funding for homelessness assistance has risen significantly, with HUD allocating approximately $3.6 billion in fiscal year 2023 for CoC and ESG programs, yet national PIT estimates increased 12% from 2022 to 2023 and continued upward trends into 2024, amid debates over whether expanded outlays—totaling over $4 billion annually by 2025—effectively target root causes or merely sustain temporary interventions. Critics, including policy analysts, argue that federal grants often prioritize compliance with models, which provide immediate permanent housing without requiring sobriety or treatment, potentially disincentivizing states from enforcing accountability measures for or mental illness, factors present in 26% and 20% of chronic homeless cases per HUD data. National policy debates center on the efficacy of , the federally endorsed framework since the early 2010s, which randomized controlled trials show improves short-term housing stability but yields mixed results on sustained outcomes without integrated behavioral health interventions, as rates can exceed 20% in untreated cohorts. Proponents, drawing from studies by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, contend it is cost-effective for high-needs populations, reducing public service costs by up to 50% through decreased emergency room visits. Opponents, including reports from conservative policy institutes, highlight failures in jurisdictions like where federal funding correlates with persistent encampments, advocating "treatment-first" alternatives that mandate addressing and —prevalent in 38% of unsheltered homeless per empirical surveys—before housing allocation to prevent cycling back into streets. Recent executive actions underscore tensions, with a 2025 order directing federal agencies to prioritize institutionalization for severe cases via civil commitment and to restrict funding for programs enabling street encampments, reversing aspects of prior administrations' emphases on unconditional . Debates also encompass federal overreach into state-level , such as HUD's influence on zoning via grant conditions, versus arguments for devolving control to states with lower rates that emphasize work requirements and , as evidenced by comparative outcomes in GAO-reviewed programs. These discussions persist amid evidence that federal policies inadequately address upstream drivers like deinstitutionalization legacies and epidemics, with only 20% of funding directed toward expansions despite their causal role in 25-30% of cases.

Interstate Variations and Policy Correlations

Characteristics of High-Homelessness States

States with the highest rates of homelessness, measured as individuals per 10,000 population, include New York (81 per 10,000), Hawaii (81 per 10,000), California (48 per 10,000), Vermont (53 per 10,000), and Oregon (54 per 10,000), according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) 2024 Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR). These rates exceed the national average of approximately 23 per 10,000, with total homelessness in these states accounting for a disproportionate share of the national figure of 771,480 individuals counted on a single night in January 2024. Other high-rate states include Washington, Massachusetts, and Alaska, often featuring large metropolitan areas where concentrated poverty and service demands amplify visibility. A primary characteristic is elevated housing costs relative to incomes, with high-homelessness states exhibiting median gross rents often surpassing $1,800 monthly—far above the national median of $1,300—and severe shortages of units affordable to extremely low-income households. For instance, in California and New York, where over 40% of low-income renters face severe cost burdens (spending more than 50% of income on housing), restrictive zoning and land-use regulations limit new construction, exacerbating supply constraints and driving up prices. Empirical analyses of housing market data from 2007 to 2016 confirm that interstate variations in homelessness rates align closely with local rental market tightness and affordability gaps, rather than solely poverty levels or unemployment. Geographically, many such states feature mild climates that enable higher proportions of unsheltered homelessness, with (66% unsheltered), (62%), and sustaining outdoor encampments year-round due to temperate winters. This contrasts with colder states, where shelter usage predominates; studies indicate that warmer average temperatures correlate with 20-30% higher unsheltered rates, independent of policy interventions. in coastal or further concentrates populations, drawing inflows of individuals from harsher climates or other states seeking survivability, though data show net migration of homeless individuals toward these areas predates recent policy shifts. Policy environments in these states often include progressive governance, with Democratic majorities in legislatures and high per-capita spending on homelessness programs—California allocated over $20 billion since 2018—yet persistent high rates suggest inefficiencies, such as emphasis on permanent supportive housing over enforcement or supply-side reforms. Increases in New York (53% rise from 2023-2024) are partly attributed to asylum seeker arrivals straining shelter systems, while Oregon's decriminalization of hard drugs in 2020 coincided with a 15.8% homelessness uptick, though causal links remain debated amid confounding factors like post-pandemic evictions. Sources from federal agencies like HUD provide raw counts but underemphasize behavioral incentives, such as lax anti-camping ordinances that sustain visible encampments, potentially signaling tolerance to transients; conservative analyses highlight how such policies in blue-leaning states correlate with elevated rates compared to low-regulation counterparts. Overall, while economic pressures dominate, state-level choices on housing deregulation and public order enforcement appear to modulate outcomes, with high-rate states showing weaker supply responses to demand.

Characteristics of Low-Homelessness States

States with the lowest rates of homelessness , based on the U.S. Department of and Urban Development's (HUD) 2023 Point-in-Time (PIT) estimates, include (3.5 per 10,000 residents), (approximately 4 per 10,000), and (around 8 per 10,000). These rates contrast sharply with national averages of about 20 per 10,000 and highs exceeding 70 per 10,000 in states like New York and . Such low figures often occur in predominantly rural or less urbanized states in the and , where absolute homeless populations remain small, such as 's 1,416 individuals in 2023. A primary characteristic is availability, with low median gross rents correlating inversely with homelessness rates; , for example, ranks second-lowest in rents nationally while maintaining the minimal rate. These states feature lower overall costs relative to incomes, reducing risks despite high levels—'s rate exceeds 19%, yet family-assisted and multigenerational households mitigate street homelessness. Rural demographics further contribute, as dispersed populations limit urban encampments and foster informal support networks through extended families and community institutions, absorbing potential cases that might otherwise appear in PIT counts. Limited inflow of non-local homeless individuals represents another factor, as these states lack the mild climates or expansive public services that draw migrants to coastal or Western high-rate areas. Policy environments emphasize enforcement of public order laws over permissive encampment tolerance, potentially deterring visible unsheltered , though undercounting in rural zones may occur due to less systematic . Empirical data indicate stable or declining trends in these states amid national increases, suggesting structural affordability and social cohesion play causal roles beyond mere metrics.
StateHomeless per 10,000 (2023)Median Gross Rent Rank (Lowest to Highest)
3.52nd
~4.0Low
~8.0Low

Evidence on Policy Effectiveness Across States

Empirical research links state homelessness rates primarily to housing supply constraints rather than direct welfare expenditures or unconditional housing provision. A 2023 analysis by the determined that variations in state land-use regulatory freedom account for 38% of differences in homelessness rates, with less and permitting processes enabling greater construction and correlating with lower per capita . Restrictive policies in high- states like exacerbate shortages, as evidenced by studies showing that a $100 rent increase associates with a 9% rise in within continuums of care. High-profile spending initiatives have demonstrated diminishing returns without structural reforms. California disbursed $24 billion on homelessness programs from fiscal years 2018-19 through 2022-23, yet the homeless population grew by about 31,000 during that period, from 151,000 to 182,000, according to state audits citing poor outcome tracking and fragmented accountability across over 400 programs. Independent reviews, including from the , attribute this to insufficient emphasis on supply-side incentives and overreliance on temporary subsidies amid rising costs. The Housing First approach, which prioritizes immediate permanent housing without requiring sobriety or treatment, produced short-term gains in select implementations but faltered in scalability and long-term reduction of street homelessness. Utah's statewide adoption in the early 2010s initially cut chronic homelessness by 91% through 2015 via targeted supportive units, but total homelessness rose 18% to 4,584 individuals by 2023, prompting legislative shifts toward sobriety-contingent housing and stricter eligibility to address persistent unsheltered cases and cost inefficiencies. A Cicero Institute of national data concluded that Housing First expanded unsheltered populations in adopting jurisdictions by failing to enforce behavioral requirements, increasing per-person costs without proportional reductions. Drug policy liberalization has correlated with worsened visible in experimental states. Oregon's Measure 110, enacted in 2020 to decriminalize small possession amounts and redirect funds to treatment, preceded a 56% surge from 2020-2022 amid fentanyl influxes, open-air markets, and strained systems, factors prompting voters to recriminalize personal possession in 2024. Advocacy analyses denying causation overlook confounding rises in rates and untreated , which state data tied to 23% higher unintentional overdose deaths post-decriminalization. States with comparatively low homelessness rates, such as (least per capita at under 2 per 1,000) and , exhibit lower housing costs, milder climates for migration deterrence, and policies favoring enforcement of public camping bans alongside limited but targeted shelters, though levels complicate isolating effects. These contrast with high-rate states' permissive encampment tolerances, where a 2023 Community Solutions review found that combining shelter mandates with anti-camping ordinances reduced street presence more effectively than alone in cities like . Integrated models emphasizing supply deregulation, treatment mandates for severe mental illness and substance use (affecting 20-25% of chronically homeless), and accountability in spending show promise in pilots, per peer-reviewed syntheses, but require overcoming institutional biases favoring non-coercive interventions documented in federal evaluations.

Major State Profiles

California

California has the largest homeless population in the United States, with 187,084 individuals enumerated in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) 2024 Point-in-Time (PIT) count, representing 28% of the national total despite the state comprising only 12% of the U.S. population. Of these, approximately 70% were unsheltered, a higher proportion than the national average, with concentrations in urban areas such as County (over 72,000 in 2024, down 4% from prior year) and . The PIT methodology involves one-night snapshots in January, supplemented by local Continuum of Care (CoC) surveys, though critics note potential undercounts of hidden populations and over-reliance on volunteer efforts. From 2020 to 2024, 's homeless count rose from around 151,000 to 187,000, a roughly 24% increase, but the growth rate slowed to 3% between 2023 and 2024, compared to 18% nationally. Early data from 2025 PIT counts, based on reports from local CoCs, indicate a 9% drop in unsheltered homelessness, as announced by Governor Newsom in January 2026—the largest such decline in over a decade—contrasting with a national increase in homelessness; Newsom attributed the progress to state investments exceeding $24 billion since 2019. This trend reflects expansions in sheltered beds (up significantly post-COVID via state funding), yet unsheltered numbers remain elevated, particularly amid rising housing costs exceeding $3,000 monthly median rents in coastal metros. Demographic data from the 2023 California Statewide Study of People Experiencing Homelessness (conducted by UCSF and UC San Francisco) indicates 47% of adults are aged 50 or older, with disproportionate representation among (37% of homeless vs. 6% of population) and Native American individuals; 40% report , and 37% substance use disorders, often co-occurring. Empirical analyses attribute primary entry into homelessness to economic pressures, with 58% of recent evictees citing inability to pay rent or high costs as the trigger, compounded by job loss or medical expenses. However, chronic unsheltered correlates strongly with untreated behavioral health issues; the UCSF study found 63% experienced social factors like family conflict or prior to , while state-level data links deinstitutionalization legacies and lax enforcement to persistent encampments. Policies such as Proposition 47 (2014), which reclassified certain drug possession and theft offenses from felonies to misdemeanors, reduced incarceration rates by over 30% for affected crimes, correlating with increased public drug use and visible disorder in high- areas, as fewer individuals face mandatory treatment or housing-linked conditions. Proponents credit Prop 47 with reallocating $490 million in prison savings to treatment grants since 2014, but empirical reviews show reductions limited to non-drug offenses, with arrests dropping post-passage amid debates over incentivizing untreated . State responses have included over $24 billion in homelessness expenditures from fiscal years 2018-2023 across 30+ programs, equating to roughly $115,000 per chronically homeless person, funding shelter expansions and initiatives prioritizing rapid rehousing without preconditions. A 2024 state auditor report criticized inconsistent outcome tracking, noting that while homelessness declined 15% nationally (with leading reductions via targeted HUD-VASH vouchers), overall metrics like bed utilization and recidivism into homelessness lack program-level evaluation, hindering assessments of cost-effectiveness. Recent policy shifts, including Governor Newsom's 2024 executive order mandating encampment clearances and local sweeps in yielding a 4% countywide drop, suggest enforcement against public camping may reduce visibility, though long-term shelter retention remains below 50% in many CoCs due to unaddressed substance and barriers.

New York

New York State recorded 158,019 people experiencing during the January 2024 Point-in-Time (PIT) count, marking a 53% increase from 2023 and more than doubling the figure from 2022. Of this total, 152,381 were (96.4%), reflecting the state's extensive shelter system mandated by the 1981 Callahan v. Carey , which requires provision of shelter to all eligible applicants. Unsheltered homelessness stood at 5,638, a low proportion compared to national averages, concentrated primarily outside (NYC). NYC accounted for 140,134 of the state's homeless population (88.7%), driving 93% of the 2022-2024 statewide increase. The surge, particularly in sheltered populations, correlates strongly with the influx of asylum seekers and migrants; in NYC, this accounted for approximately 88% of the sheltered rise from 2023 to 2024. Families comprised 60.4% of the 2024 total (95,457 individuals), with children making up 32.1% (50,773), both categories tripling and doubling respectively since 2022, largely due to migrant family arrivals. Upstate regions experienced smaller but notable rises, such as 138% in the Glens Falls area and 11% in Poughkeepsie, often tied to family and child amid local pressures. /Latino individuals represented 55.5% of the homeless population, aligning with demographic shifts from recent migrations. Empirical analyses identify structural factors like eviction rates—191,230 filings statewide in 2024—and chronic housing shortages exacerbated by rising rents as baseline contributors, with post-COVID eviction moratorium lifts amplifying flows into . For families, surveys indicate immediate triggers including , overcrowding in doubled-up , and , rather than or mental illness, which predominate among single adults. Neighborhood-level data link shelter entries to housing market dynamics, such as gentrification-induced displacement in NYC. The right-to- policy has sustained high sheltered rates but strained capacity, with shelter censuses reaching record levels amid the migrant wave, prompting debates on its role in attracting non-local inflows without addressing root deficits. Chronic declined 10.5% year-over-year, potentially reflecting better access, though veterans saw a modest 7.5% rise. Unaccompanied youth increased 71.7%, underscoring vulnerabilities in supportive services.

Florida

Florida recorded 30,756 individuals experiencing during the 2023 Point-in-Time (PIT) count, equating to roughly 14 per 10,000 residents—a figure below the national average of approximately 23 per 10,000. Unsheltered , comprising those living on streets, in vehicles, or encampments, stood at 15,482 in 2023 but rose to 16,979 by 2024, reflecting a 9.7% increase amid broader national upticks. The state's overall homeless population has grown 17% from 2022 to 2023, yet it declined by 30% since 2007, even as Florida's total population expanded by over 23% in the same period. Demographic data indicate that chronic homelessness affects about 20% of Florida's homeless population, with substance use disorders prevalent among 20.4% and among roughly 25%. Veterans comprise around 7% of the total, while families with children account for 28%, though unsheltered rates remain lower than in states like due to expanded shelter capacity. Miami-Dade, Hillsborough, and Orange counties host the largest shares, with Miami-Dade alone reporting over 5,000 homeless individuals in 2023. Empirical factors driving Florida's homelessness include economic pressures such as rising housing costs outpacing wages, with the state's shortage exacerbated by post-pandemic and influx. Studies of homeless individuals in the state attribute primary causes to job loss and rather than voluntary choices, though the mild climate draws migrants from northern states, contributing to interstate flows estimated at 10-15% of arrivals. like hurricanes amplify vulnerability, displacing thousands temporarily, while untreated and issues sustain chronic cases, with data showing 40% of unsheltered individuals exhibiting severe behavioral health needs. State policies under Governor emphasize enforcement and treatment over permissive encampments, exemplified by House Bill 1365 (effective October 1, 2024), which bans unauthorized public camping or sleeping on streets, sidewalks, and public lands unless localities certify designated sites with services. The law, inspired by the U.S. Supreme Court's Grants Pass decision, allows private lawsuits against non-compliant municipalities and prioritizes connecting individuals to shelters, treatment, and recovery programs. Florida's Council on Homelessness coordinates these efforts, funding over 19,000 shelter beds and promoting evidence-based interventions like rapid rehousing tied to sobriety requirements, contrasting with models in higher-homelessness states. Outcomes include a rate roughly half that of or New York, with state reports crediting stricter reforms and welfare work requirements for containing growth despite population booms.

Texas

maintains one of the lower rates of per in the United States, with approximately 6 to 8 individuals experiencing per 10,000 residents as of recent point-in-time (PIT) counts, compared to the national average of about 18 per 10,000. The state's homeless population totaled around 27,000 to 28,000 in the 2023 HUD PIT count, reflecting modest increases from prior years amid national surges, but remaining stable relative to 's rapid population and economic growth. Between 2019 and 2023, the overall trend showed a decline from earlier peaks, with a notable 30.8% drop in unique individuals served in 2020 due to interventions, followed by partial rebounds tied to cost pressures. Urban centers like , , and Austin account for the majority of cases, with serving over 23,000 people accessing homeless services in 2023 across its metro area. Demographics skew toward single adults, with rising shares among families and veterans; veteran homelessness in increased 19% from 2022 to 2023, adding 325 individuals, concentrated in cities like San Antonio and . Factors contributing to relatively low rates include robust job markets in energy and tech sectors, which facilitate and mobility out of , alongside milder climates that reduce survival barriers without enabling widespread unsheltered living. Housing affordability, with a price-to-income ratio of 4.0, contrasts sharply with high- states like (7.7), correlating with fewer evictions leading to street . State policies emphasize enforcement over permissive models, exemplified by House Bill 1925 (2021), which prohibits public camping and mandates enforcement to deter encampments. This approach gained federal backing via the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 ruling upholding local bans on outdoor sleeping, enabling cities to clear sites without Eighth Amendment challenges. In October 2025, Governor directed state agencies to conduct sweeps in Austin, relocating dozens and arresting others for public safety violations involving weapons and needles, amid local resistance but alignment with broader deterrence strategies. Cities like and have similarly prioritized shelter beds, treatment, and rapid rehousing over unconditional permanent , yielding lower unsheltered rates (around 40% statewide vs. national highs exceeding 60% in permissive jurisdictions). Empirical correlations suggest these enforcement-oriented policies, combined with economic incentives, sustain lower per capita homelessness despite population influxes, challenging narratives prioritizing supply alone without addressing behavioral and public order factors.

Washington

In 2024, Washington state recorded 31,554 individuals experiencing homelessness according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Point-in-Time (PIT) count conducted in January, marking the third-highest total in the nation behind California and New York. Of these, approximately 52% were unsheltered, with 16,215 people lacking shelter compared to 14,825 in emergency or transitional housing. King County, encompassing Seattle, accounted for a significant portion, with over 13,000 homeless individuals in 2024, reflecting a 26% rise from 2022. Homelessness in Washington has surged in recent years, with state PIT counts showing a 25% increase from 2022 to 2025, reaching nearly 22,000 on a single night in early 2025 excluding partial King County data. From 2019 to 2024, the unsheltered population grew amid rising housing costs, with median rents in urban areas like exceeding $2,000 monthly by 2023, outpacing wage growth. Statewide, chronic homelessness—defined as one year or more with a —constitutes about 40% of cases, often linked to severe mental illness or substance use disorders affecting up to 30-40% of the homeless population. Key drivers include a chronic shortage of affordable housing units, where demand from population growth and high-income tech sector influx has driven up costs, rendering low-wage earners vulnerable to eviction. Empirical analyses attribute roughly 20-30% of risk to structural factors like rent burdens exceeding 50% of income for many households, but individual-level issues such as addiction, untreated schizophrenia, and criminal histories elevate personal susceptibility, with substance abuse documented in 25-35% of cases. Interstate migration exacerbates the issue, as Washington's permissive encampment tolerances and service availability draw individuals from states with stricter enforcement, contributing to a net inflow estimated at 10-15% of the homeless population. State policies emphasize rapid rehousing and Housing First models, allocating over $1 billion annually since 2022 for shelter expansion and subsidies, yet homelessness rose 8.9% from 2023 to 2024 despite these investments. Programs like the Washington State Plan to End Homelessness prioritize permanent supportive housing, adding 5,000 units by 2024, but critics note limited requirements for sobriety or treatment, correlating with persistent encampments and public health challenges in cities like Seattle. Recent slowdowns in growth rates—to 2.2% year-over-year in 2025—coincide with increased shelter beds, but overall numbers remain elevated, underscoring debates over whether supply-side housing alone suffices without addressing behavioral health comorbidities.

Oregon

Oregon ranks among the states with the highest rates of homelessness per capita, with approximately 22,875 individuals experiencing homelessness according to the 2023 HUD Point-in-Time (PIT) count, placing it eighth nationally in total homeless population despite ranking 27th in overall state population. The state's unsheltered homelessness rate stands at 62-65%, second-highest in the nation, reflecting a high proportion of people living in tents, vehicles, or outdoors. In Portland and surrounding Multnomah County, which account for a significant share of the state's cases, deaths among the homeless population quadrupled from 113 in 2019 to over 450 in 2023, amid visible encampments and public health challenges. Homelessness in Oregon increased by 13.6% from 2023 to 2024, outpacing some national trends but moderated compared to prior surges, with total estimates reaching around 23,000 by early 2025 projections. Contributing factors include elevated housing costs in urban areas like Portland, where rents have risen sharply, exacerbating shortages of affordable units. However, and untreated mental illness play prominent roles, with fentanyl-driven overdoses and open drug use correlating with encampment proliferation; public opinion polls attribute worsened conditions partly to 2020's Measure 110, which decriminalized small drug possessions and redirected funds to treatment but faced criticism for reducing enforcement incentives. While some analyses dispute direct causation, linking rises to and influx instead, the measure's partial recriminalization in 2024 via House Bill 4035 reflects policy reversal amid observed increases in disorder. State policies have emphasized models, prioritizing permanent over preconditions like sobriety, supported by Governor Tina Kotek's 2023 declaration on homelessness, extended through 2025, which allocates funds for shelters and services. Yet, enforcement of public camping bans lagged due to a 2021 state law restricting "objectively unreasonable" restrictions, leading to sustained encampments until the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 Grants Pass v. Johnson ruling upheld local ordinances against Eighth Amendment challenges, enabling cities like Grants Pass to clear sites. Legislative efforts in 2025 to statewide ban public camping failed, but a proposed measure seeks to repeal restrictive provisions, signaling debate over balancing compassion with public order. 's approach highlights tensions between permissive frameworks, which may attract migration or deter treatment, and emerging emphases on accountability, as evidenced by stagnant housing placements despite investments.
YearEstimated Homeless Population% Change from Prior YearUnsheltered %
2019~13,000-15,000-~50%
202014,655+~10-13%Rising
202320,142+~37% from 202065%
2024~22,875+13.6%62%
Data compiled from HUD PIT reports and state estimates; figures approximate due to counting methodologies.

Utah

In 2025, Utah reported approximately 4,400 individuals experiencing during the annual Point-in-Time (PIT) count, marking an 18% increase from the previous year and establishing a record high for the state. This equates to a rate of 13 homeless individuals per 10,000 residents, still below the national average of 23 per 10,000. Chronic homelessness, defined by federal criteria as long-term or repeated episodes coupled with disabilities, has risen significantly since 2016, increasing by over 100% to contribute disproportionately to the overall count. Utah's homelessness landscape features a low proportion of unsheltered individuals compared to national trends, with cold winters and limited tolerance for encampments channeling more people into shelters. Primary causes include escalating housing costs in urban areas like , where median rents exceed affordability for low-income households, alongside , mental illness, and economic disruptions such as job loss. Family homelessness has grown due to post-pandemic pressures and insufficient affordable units, though Utah's strong family structures and private charity networks, including support from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, mitigate some inflows by providing informal safety nets. From 2005 to 2015, implemented a strategy, prioritizing immediate permanent for the chronically homeless without preconditions like or treatment compliance, which state officials credited with a 91% reduction in that subgroup. This approach involved constructing over 1,000 units of dedicated housing and yielded reported housing stability rates above 80% for participants. However, analyses indicate the dramatic decline partly stemmed from methodological shifts in PIT counting, including annualizing shelter data and reclassifying facilities, rather than solely programmatic success. Post-2015, chronic homelessness rebounded, rising 95% by 2022 amid continued expansion, prompting critiques that the model fails to address underlying issues like and fails to prevent new entries. Recent policy adjustments reflect these shortcomings, with 2025 legislation introducing treatment mandates for eligibility and emphasizing prevention through rapid rehousing and diversion programs to avert use. State investments exceeding $100 million annually have expanded capacity and services, yet total homelessness persists upward, attributed by some to systemic incentives that prioritize service provision over resolution, including fragmented coordination between state and local entities like . Utah's overall low rate correlates more strongly with —unemployment below 3%—and cultural factors discouraging prolonged than with housing-centric interventions alone.

Territories and the District of Columbia

Washington, D.C.

The homeless population in , totaled 5,615 individuals during the 2024 Point-in-Time (PIT) count conducted in late January, reflecting a rise from 4,922 individuals in 2023, amid broader regional increases driven by expiring pandemic aid and housing shortages. The 2025 PIT count, held on January 29, 2025, indicated a 9% overall decline to roughly 5,110 individuals, including an 18.1% drop in family , which District officials attributed to expanded rapid rehousing vouchers and shelter capacity funded by federal and local allocations. Unsheltered remains a concern, with approximately 20-25% of the total occurring outdoors or in encampments near federal sites, exacerbated by the District's high median rents exceeding $2,000 monthly for one-bedroom units as of 2024. Primary causes include acute unaffordability, where over 60% of low-income renters spend more than half their on rent, compounded by stagnant wages and evictions averaging 1,200 annually in recent years. Substance use disorders and untreated severe mental illness affect over 40% of the chronically homeless , per local service provider assessments, often linked to gaps in protocols and deinstitutionalization legacies from the 1980s. Systemic factors like and exits contribute to family homelessness, which comprised about 25% of cases in 2024 PIT data. District policies emphasize models, prioritizing permanent without preconditions like sobriety, with over 1,000 units added since 2020 through public-private partnerships; however, recidivism rates exceed 30% within 12 months for some cohorts lacking integrated treatment, as evidenced by longitudinal tracking from local Continuum of Care programs. Enforcement of anti-camping ordinances has intensified post-2023, clearing over 200 sites annually, but relocation efforts yield limited permanent placements without addressing behavioral health barriers. Despite annual expenditures surpassing $400 million on homelessness initiatives in 2024—among the highest per capita nationally—sustained reductions remain elusive, prompting debates over reallocating funds toward mandatory rehab and job training over indefinite sheltering.

Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico's homeless population, as measured by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) 2024 Point-in-Time (PIT) count through its Continuum of Care (CoC) program, totaled 2,096 individuals, yielding a rate of approximately 6.4 per 10,000 residents—substantially lower than the national U.S. average of 22.7 per 10,000. Of these, 282 were sheltered (primarily in emergency shelters), while 1,814 were unsheltered, reflecting a high proportion of street amid the territory's . Households were predominantly without children (1,832 individuals), with only 141 in families with children and no reported. Subpopulations included 456 chronically homeless persons (about 22% of the total), 59 veterans, 29 unaccompanied youth aged 18-24, 7 parenting youth, and 197 fleeing . The territory's housing inventory supports these figures, with 3,209 beds available in 2024, including 2,230 in permanent , 564 in rapid re-housing, 402 in , and 689 in emergency —exceeding the PIT count and indicating capacity for shelter expansion if utilization increased. Despite Puerto Rico's persistently high rate (around 40-50% in recent years) and economic challenges, the low rate relative to states suggests mitigating factors such as networks absorbing at-risk individuals, though official counts may underrepresent transient or hidden . Local surveys identify primary causes as (53.4%, particularly drugs like and ), family conflicts (25.7%), financial difficulties (19.8%), (17.9%), issues (16.1%), and evictions (13.2%), often compounded by natural disasters like in 2017, which exacerbated vulnerabilities and housing loss. Trends show variability: a 2022 local study reported a 24% decline to 1,026 homeless from 1,345 in 2019, attributed partly to post-disaster aid and policy efforts, but the 2024 CoC PIT indicated stabilization or slight uptick amid national rises. Recent reports note increasing chronic homelessness proportions, with some surveys citing 40.7% chronic in 2025 samples versus prior years, linked to untreated and trauma from disasters. operates two CoCs receiving federal funding (over $22 million in FY 2021), focusing on supportive services, though critics highlight inefficiencies in addressing root causes like substance use and over expansive subsidies.

Other Territories

In the U.S. territories excluding and the District of Columbia, data is limited compared to the mainland, with Point-in-Time (PIT) counts conducted irregularly or at smaller scales due to resource constraints, geographic isolation, and unique economic factors such as reliance on , bases, and vulnerability to . Federal HUD reports, including the 2024 Annual Assessment Report, incorporate territory data for the first time in recent years but aggregate it minimally, reflecting low overall numbers relative to the national total of 771,480. Local counts reveal persistent challenges, including high rates of unsheltered driven by shortages, typhoons, and post-pandemic economic pressures. Guam reports the highest homelessness among these territories, with the 2024 PIT count identifying 1,249 individuals experiencing , up 16% from 1,075 in 2023; of these, 1,104 were unsheltered, highlighting inadequate shelter capacity amid a of approximately 170,000. Factors include military-driven population influx, limited , and frequent natural disasters exacerbating vulnerability.
TerritoryYearTotal HomelessShelteredUnshelteredNotes
Guam20241,2491441,104Increase from 1,075 in 2023; largely rural CoC.
U.S. Virgin Islands2023318N/A252Unsheltered rose to 304 by early 2025; crisis-level strain on emergency shelters.
In the U.S. Virgin Islands, the 2023 PIT count recorded 318 people experiencing in a population of about 87,000, with unsheltered individuals comprising the majority at 252; by March 2025, unsheltered numbers had climbed to 304, overwhelming limited resources and prompting calls for expanded , particularly for families. Data for the Commonwealth of the (CNMI) and remains sparse, with no recent comprehensive PIT counts available in federal or local reports; CNMI officials note as an emerging issue tied to shortages and job losses, though less severe than in , while focuses on prevention programs without quantified prevalence estimates. These territories receive federal funding for initiatives like PATH grants and youth services, but systemic underreporting and small populations (CNMI ~47,000; ~45,000) limit visibility.

Key Controversies and Viewpoints

Housing First vs. Treatment-First Approaches

The approach prioritizes providing immediate permanent housing to individuals experiencing homelessness without preconditions such as , treatment compliance, or behavioral requirements, often coupled with voluntary supportive services afterward. Originating from Sam Tsemberis's Pathways to Housing program in in the early , it gained federal endorsement through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the Obama administration's policy framework, influencing Continuum of Care grants that fund most homelessness assistance programs. Proponents cite randomized controlled trials, such as those in the At Home/Chez Soi project adapted in the U.S., showing Housing First participants achieving housing stability rates of 60-80% over two years, compared to 30-50% in traditional models requiring preconditions. A 2020 of 26 studies reported an 88% reduction in homelessness and 41% improvement in stability versus treatment-first alternatives, though these analyses often originate from advocacy-aligned organizations like the National Low Income Housing Coalition, which may emphasize housing metrics over broader outcomes. In contrast, treatment-first approaches mandate addressing underlying issues—primarily severe mental illness and substance use disorders—through mandatory rehabilitation, psychiatric care, or requirements before or concurrent with placement, viewing stable as unattainable without resolving these causal factors. Empirical data indicate that among chronically homeless adults, 25-40% suffer from serious mental illnesses like , and 30-50% have substance use disorders, often co-occurring, which correlate strongly with repeated shelter use and street encampments rather than mere shortages. Peer-reviewed studies, including a 2010 analysis of versus treatment-first for those with active , found no superior outcomes in substance reduction or recovery for , with some participants continuing heavy use in subsidized units, leading to evictions or . Critics, drawing from first-principles , argue that providing without accountability enables perpetuation of destructive behaviors, as evidenced by Utah's early implementation in 2005, which initially reduced visible but saw rates rebound to pre-program levels by 2015 amid rising and crises untreated. Cost-effectiveness debates further highlight tensions, with per-person annual expenses ranging from $30,000 to $50,000 due to high turnover from non-compliance, versus treatment-first models that integrate enforcement and achieve longer-term self-sufficiency in subsets with enforced sobriety. A Cicero Institute review of federal data concluded fails as a standalone , correlating with national increases from 550,000 in 2019 to over 650,000 by 2023 despite billions in funding, as it overlooks supply-side housing constraints and demand from untreated behavioral pathologies. Mainstream academic sources often downplay these limitations, reflecting institutional biases toward harm-reduction ideologies over rigorous preconditioning, yet dissenting analyses from outlets like the Manhattan Institute underscore that community-level persists because stabilizes individuals temporarily but does not deter inflows driven by addiction epidemics. Recent policy shifts reflect growing skepticism of pure dominance. In 2025, a presidential directed federal agencies to deprioritize Housing First in favor of accountability-focused models incorporating treatment mandates and public order enforcement, citing failures in high-adoption states like , where encampments proliferated despite $24 billion spent from 2018-2023 with minimal net reduction. States such as and have piloted hybrid treatment-first initiatives since 2023, requiring detox or therapy entry for shelter access, yielding preliminary drops in chronic cases by targeting root causes over unconditional sheltering. These approaches align with causal realism, recognizing that while Housing First aids acute shelter avoidance, sustainable exits demand confronting empirically verified drivers like untreated (linked to 20-30% of unsheltered homelessness) and opioid dependencies, rather than deferring them indefinitely.

Enforcement of Public Order Laws

Enforcement of public order laws targeting homeless encampments and related behaviors, such as prohibitions on public sleeping, camping, and loitering, has intensified across the United States following the Supreme Court's 6-3 decision in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson on June 28, 2024, which held that such ordinances do not constitute cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment, even absent sufficient shelter beds. Prior to this ruling, Ninth Circuit precedents like Martin v. Boise (2018) had restricted enforcement in Western states when shelter was unavailable, contributing to unchecked encampment growth in places like California and Oregon. The decision has prompted approximately 150 cities in 32 states to enact or strengthen bans on camping or sleeping in public spaces, with another 40 measures pending as of January 2025. State-level variations reflect political and judicial differences, with traditionally conservative states maintaining stricter enforcement frameworks that predate the ruling, while progressive-leaning states on the West Coast have historically prioritized non-enforcement approaches but are now shifting. In , cities like Austin and enforce anti-camping ordinances aggressively, including regular sweeps and fines up to $500 for violations, correlating with lower per capita homelessness rates compared to coastal states ( at 4.2 unsheltered per 10,000 residents in 2023 versus California's 22.5). Florida's HB 1365, effective October 1, 2024, statewide bans unauthorized public camping and mandates municipalities to designate zones with services or face liability, resulting in over 200 encampment clearances by mid-2025, though enforcement efficacy remains debated amid reports of displacement without proportional shelter expansion. In contrast, pre-ruling leniency in —home to the Grants Pass case—allowed persistent encampments in Portland and Eugene, but post-ruling clearances have increased, with state officials citing risks from untreated waste and drug use in camps. Western states like and Washington, long criticized for de facto tolerance of encampments due to court injunctions and "right to shelter" interpretations, have seen partial reversals. Governor Gavin Newsom's July 2024 directed state agencies to withhold funding from non-compliant localities and prioritize clearances, leading at least 14 cities—including Fresno and —to adopt stricter bans prohibiting sitting, lying, or camping anywhere on public property at any time, with penalties up to $1,000 or jail time. In Washington, six cities including Spokane passed similar measures by late 2024, authorizing arrests for outdoor sleeping despite advocacy claims of criminalizing homelessness itself. Empirical data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development indicates that states with consistent pre-2024 enforcement, such as and , exhibit lower unsheltered homelessness growth (e.g., up 12% from 2019-2023 versus 's 60%), suggesting deterrence effects, though critics from organizations like the National Alliance to End Homelessness argue such policies exacerbate cycles of fines and incarceration without addressing root causes like addiction and mental illness. These enforcement disparities have fueled debates over interstate migration, with evidence from HUD's 2023 Annual Homeless Assessment Report showing net inflows to high-benefit, low-enforcement states like California (inflow exceeding outflow by thousands annually), potentially incentivizing policies that prioritize treatment and accountability over unconditional tolerance. Utah, emphasizing coordinated treatment-first models alongside ordinances, has sustained reductions in chronic homelessness (down 91% from 2005-2015 per state audits), contrasting with surges in non-enforcing jurisdictions. Ongoing challenges include resource strains on law enforcement for sweeps and the need for alternatives like involuntary commitment for severe mental health cases, as lax enforcement correlates with elevated public disorder metrics, including a 2023 FBI report noting higher violent crime rates near untreated encampments in cities like Los Angeles and Seattle.

Mental Health Deinstitutionalization Legacy

Deinstitutionalization in the United States refers to the policy-driven reduction in long-term psychiatric hospital beds, initiated in the mid-20th century with the advent of antipsychotic medications like chlorpromazine (Thorazine) in 1954 and accelerated by the Community Mental Health Act of 1963, which aimed to shift care from state institutions to community-based services. In 1955, state and county psychiatric hospitals held approximately 558,000 patients, equating to about 340 beds per 100,000 population; by 2016, this had plummeted to around 37,679 beds nationwide, or roughly 11 beds per 100,000. The policy was motivated by concerns over institutional abuses and a belief in reintegration, but federal and state governments failed to adequately fund the promised community mental health centers, leaving many individuals with severe mental illnesses (SMI) without structured support. This legacy directly contributed to the rise in homelessness among those with untreated SMI, as evidenced by the sharp increase in street homelessness during the 1980s amid economic downturns and the closure of remaining facilities without viable alternatives. Epidemiological studies estimate that 25-30% of the homeless population suffers from SMI such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, far exceeding the general population rate of about 6%; lifetime prevalence of any mental disorder among homeless individuals reaches 77%, with current rates at 67%. Untreated SMI individuals comprise roughly one-third of the chronic homeless subset, often cycling through emergency rooms, jails, and encampments due to the absence of compulsory care options. The shortage of psychiatric beds persists as a key factor exacerbating state-level homelessness disparities, with national capacity at only 28.4 beds per 100,000 population as of recent assessments—well below historical norms and international benchmarks for needs. States that aggressively pursued deinstitutionalization, such as and New York, now face acute bed shortages correlated with higher homelessness rates; for instance, California's psychiatric bed count dropped over 80% since the , coinciding with its outsized share of the national unsheltered population. Transinstitutionalization into correctional facilities has partially absorbed this population, with prisons holding over 170,000 individuals designated as seriously mentally ill by 2006—up from minimal numbers in 1978—yet this does not address underlying treatment gaps. Critics, including psychiatrists advocating for reformed , argue that the policy's overreliance on voluntary community care ignored the incapacity of many with SMI to seek help, resulting in preventable crises rather than successful reintegration.

Interstate Migration and Policy Magnets

Numerous municipalities across the operate relocation programs that provide one-way bus, train, or plane tickets to individuals experiencing , often funding travel to hometowns or areas with to reduce local shelter burdens. These initiatives, active in at least 16 cities as of 2017, have facilitated the relocation of thousands annually, with destinations frequently including high- hubs like , , and from smaller or mid-sized locales such as or . While proponents view these as compassionate returns to support networks, critics argue they export social costs to jurisdictions perceived as having more lenient policies or greater resources, effectively creating interstate shifts in homeless populations without addressing root causes. Follow-up tracking in revealed that about 12.5% of relocatees returned within a year seeking services, indicating limited long-term efficacy. Empirical surveys challenge the notion of widespread voluntary interstate migration driven by "policy magnets" such as generous shelter access or lax encampment enforcement. In California, which hosts nearly 25% of the nation's homeless population, a 2023 study of over 3,000 unsheltered individuals found that 90% resided in the state prior to homelessness, with most of the out-of-state minority (about 10%) having prior familial, employment, or birth ties to California. Similarly, broader analyses of welfare generosity as a migration pull factor show minimal evidence of domestic interstate movement solely for benefits, as personal factors like job loss, eviction, or substance issues typically precipitate local homelessness rather than prompting relocation. However, localized policy variations may indirectly influence flows: jurisdictions reinstating anti-camping ordinances, such as Austin, Texas, in 2021, reported a one-third decline in unsheltered downtown populations, suggesting that stricter enforcement can deter persistence or inflow compared to areas tolerating visible encampments. The policy magnet hypothesis posits that states or cities with permissive approaches—eschewing public order enforcement in favor of unconditional —draw individuals from stricter neighbors, exacerbating concentrations in places like or . Yet, data indicate that while bussing programs enable some redistribution, net domestic migration remains low, with homelessness rates more closely tied to in-state affordability and economic pressures than to cross-border attraction. States with robust enforcement and treatment mandates, such as and , maintain lower rates despite , implying that policy environments shape retention and visibility more than attraction. This dynamic underscores interstate disparities, where exported individuals strain receiving systems without reciprocal accountability, though comprehensive tracking of post-relocation outcomes remains scarce.

References

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