Homeless Leadership Coalition kicks off annual ‘Point in Time Count next Tuesday

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) -- The Homeless Leadership Coalition, Central Oregon’s Continuum of Care, will be kicking off the week-long annual Point in Time Count in Central Oregon next Tuesday, part of a state and national effort to identify the number of individuals experiencing homelessness.
HLC partners and volunteers will be counting sheltered and unsheltered homeless in Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties, including the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. The count will take place over the course of a week to reach as many of our unhoused residents as possible.
The Point in Time Count attempts to capture data on both sheltered and unsheltered individuals experiencing homelessness. In addition, information is gathered on a wide range of characteristics of those experiencing homelessness including age, gender, race, ethnicity, veteran status, and disability status. With this information, the Homeless Leadership Coalition, local governments, and agencies target services and develop plans to address the crisis of poverty and homelessness in Central Oregon.
These counts are the source of nationwide data on sheltered and unsheltered homelessness. This one-night count is required of all jurisdictions receiving U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funding to provide housing and services for individuals and families experiencing homelessness.
This information helps the federal government to better understand the nature and extent of homelessness nationwide and direct federal funding accordingly. Count information has also directly led to state investments in our region to impact the crisis of unsheltered homelessness that is seen across public lands in our region. Homeless Leadership Coalition uses this data to make strategic decisions about projects to prioritize in the annual HUD funding competition.
Eliza Wilson, Chair of the Homeless Leadership Coalition, said, “Central Oregon has and will continue to face the need to support our neighbors from youth and families to aging adults who find it harder, and harder to pay for their basic needs, especially housing. While it is important to build a strong homelessness response system to quickly rehouse those who are unsheltered, we must make sure housing is affordable in Central Oregon for people of all income levels, and at all stages of their lives so they can live here and thrive.”
About the Point in Time Count:
Counts will take place in La Pine, Bend, Sisters, Redmond, Prineville, Madras and Warm Springs. The count is a service-based count, leveraging already existing partnerships and services to those experiencing homelessness. Surveys will be conducted from January 28th to February 3rd, asking folks where they slept on the night of January 27th.
Those counted through this effort include people living in:
● Shelters
● Transitional housing
● “Doubled up” or precariously housed with families/friends
● Camping, sleeping outdoors or in cars or RVs without full hookup
● Other places not meant for human habitation like a shed or storage unit
For more information: The media and anyone interested in learning more, is encouraged to contact HLC members directly to learn more about their participation in the Point in Time Count.
About the Central Oregon Homeless Leadership Coalition: The Homeless Leadership Coalition leads a community-centered, coordinated and collaborative response to prevent and end homelessness as the HUD-designated Continuum of Care (OR-503) for Central Oregon. The coalition is a collaboration of community partners in Crook, Jefferson, and Deschutes counties, including the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, engaging the community through education, advocacy, planning, prioritizing and accountability for services to persons experiencing homelessness. HLC members include shelter providers, public schools, public health, emergency services, veterans’ outreach, faith communities, public safety, mental health, housing services, public services, private employers, people with lived experience of homelessness and others. HLC members represent a diverse group of interests, unified by a belief that we are stronger, healthier, safer communities where people can thrive when everyone has a safe, stable place to call home!