Home » Northern Michigan homeless advocates say housing-first policies work. But feds could cut funding

Northern Michigan homeless advocates say housing-first policies work. But feds could cut funding

Northern Michigan homeless advocates say housing-first policies work. But feds could cut funding

A week ago, teams of volunteers and homeless service providers fanned out across northwest Michigan, armed with flashlights, supplies and clipboards, searching for people experiencing homelessness.

TheeffortwaspartoftheannualPoint-In-Timecount—anationwidesurveyconductedeachJanuarytoestimatehowmanypeopleareexperiencinghomelessnessonasinglenight.ThedatahelpstheU.S.DepartmentofHousingandUrbanDevelopmenttracktrendsanddeterminehowfederalfundingisdistributed. Whilethecountitselfhasn’tchanged,howHUDmayusethatdatacouldsoonlookverydifferent. “[It’s]notreallyacensus,butjustaone-nightsnapshot,”saidAshleyHalladay-Schmandt,directoroftheNorthwestMichiganCoalitiontoEndHomelessness. Thisyear’spreliminarycountshowed25peoplelivingwithoutshelterinnorthwestlowerMichigan.Thatnumberislowerthanpeopleexperiencinghomelessness,abroadertermthatencompassespeopleinunstablelivingsituations,livingattemporarysheltersandmore.Thatnumbe