logo
Homelessness jumps again in Kentucky as Trump administration moves to cut housing funds

Homelessness jumps again in Kentucky as Trump administration moves to cut housing funds

Yahoo2 days ago
The vast majority of counties and rural communities in the state do not have emergency shelters, which often means there is 'nowhere else for people to go but to sleep outside,' said Shaye Rabold of the Kentucky Housing Corp. (Getty Images)
As homelessness rises in Kentucky, especially outside the two largest cities, the Trump administration wants to cut hundreds of millions of dollars in federal support for state housing programs.
Recently released data showing an increase in Kentuckians experiencing homelessness comes from the annual 'Point-In-Time' count conducted each January to capture a snapshot of homelessness across the country. The Kentucky Housing Corporation, a quasi-governmental agency that manages federal funding for housing, publishes the numbers.
In January 2025, volunteers and agency outreach workers counted 5,789 individuals who lacked 'a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence,' the federal definition of homeless used for the survey. That was a 10.7% increase from January 2024.
The most significant percentage increases in homelessness were outside the state's two largest cities. Louisville and Jefferson County saw an increase of 6%, Lexington and Fayette County saw an increase of 12%. The increase in the other 118 counties was 13.3%.
Shaye Rabold, a technical administrator for the Kentucky Housing Corporation who helped coordinate the January count, told the Lantern the rise in homelessness was unfortunately 'not surprising.'
She said calls from people needing assistance statewide continue to increase, driven by people who became homeless less than a year ago. It's the fourth year in a row the count has risen in Kentucky.
A main reason for the rise, Rabold said, is the state's ongoing housing shortage, especially the lack of low-income rentals.
'It's a problem nationally, but we know it's a problem in Kentucky. And so when you have people that literally have nowhere else to go — they're pushed out of the market, or they don't have family support that they can lean on, whatever the case might be — it's going to lead to increases in homelessness,' Rabold said.
The survey also counts people who meet the federal definition of unsheltered homeless because they are sleeping in cars, the wilderness, abandoned buildings and similar settings.
The largest percentage increase in unsheltered homelessness from 2024 to 2025 — 25% — also was outside Lexington and Louisville.
Adrienne Bush, the executive director of the advocacy group Homeless and Housing Coalition of Kentucky, said the picture some people have of homelessness is 'someone on a pretty busy street in a city in a tent.'
'The picture is more nuanced and fuller than just that mental image,' Bush said, referencing the significant rise in rural homelessness reflected in the data. 'The federal assistance that we do have in place is working to house people as quickly as possible, but the larger housing market conditions are creating these additional pressures.'
Critics say the annual nationwide 'Point-In-Time' effort is an undercount, pointing to how the count is conducted on only a single day in January when people experiencing homelessness are more likely to find temporary shelter indoors. Both Rabold and Bush said while the count is not perfect, it serves as a solid estimate that shows the general trend of homelessness in Kentucky.
The vast majority of counties and rural communities in the state do not have emergency shelters, which often means there is 'nowhere else for people to go but to sleep outside,' Rabold said.
Rabold also said the increased numbers outside Louisville and Lexington could be partially attributed to having additional resources for 'street outreach' in rural areas — something the housing corporation has been able to provide thanks to earlier increases in federal funding — a trend that could sharply reverse under the Trump administration.
Kentucky could lose about $286 million in federal housing funding — out of about $651 million in current funding — under a proposed 44% cut to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) budget proposed by the Trump administration. That's according to data from the Urban Institute provided to the Lantern by the Kentucky Housing Corp.
While most proposed funding cuts would come from federal rental assistance programs, the cuts also would impact HUD funding for homelessness assistance and affordable housing construction. The remaining federal funding for rental assistance would be allocated to states 'to design their own rental assistance initiatives based on their unique needs and preferences,' according to a proposed 2026 fiscal year budget outline by the Trump administration.
The budget proposals are recommendations from the executive branch and could be changed as Congress crafts and approves a federal budget. In a visit to Arkansas earlier this year, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner said the agency's ultimate goal was to 'get people off subsidies and live a life of self-sustainability.'
Kentucky Housing Corp. officials have spoken out against the significant budget cuts.
Wendy Smith, the deputy executive director of housing programs, told a Kentucky Public Radio reporter that while the state housing corporation would like to 'streamline' the 'Section 8' voucher program, the budget proposal was a 'radical cut' that would be 'disruptive at so many levels across Kentucky.'
Smith told state lawmakers in late June there was a need to boost housing supply across all income brackets. She said the impacts of a constrained housing supply were multifold, including a rise in homelessness.
'We have higher average housing costs right now. Kentuckians are spending too much of their monthly income on housing costs. We have lower home ownership rates, too little workforce housing, increased household instability as evidenced by evictions and then more homeless Kentuckians,' Smith said. 'The federal budget uncertainty makes a big question mark on a lot of this.'
Rabold disputed assertions that the continued rise of homelessness in Kentucky is evidence that federal housing funding has been ineffective. Federally funded programs designed to help homeless people find housing and other supportive services are very effective, she said. What the funding is not designed to do, she said, is prevent people from becoming homeless in the first place.
'That is more of a housing supply issue than anything,' Rabold said. 'I use the metaphor of like a bathtub with a faucet on, and you're bailing water out — but the faucet keeps running.'
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

John Oliver Reacts To ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' Cancelation: 'Terrible News For The World Of Comedy'
John Oliver Reacts To ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' Cancelation: 'Terrible News For The World Of Comedy'

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

John Oliver Reacts To ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' Cancelation: 'Terrible News For The World Of Comedy'

John Oliver was in Erie, Pennsylvania over the weekend to rebrand the city's minor league baseball to the Moon Mammoths. The Last Week Tonight host revealed in May that he would help bring a new look to the Detroit Tigers Double-A affiliate team, which was previously known as the Erie SeaWolves. More from Deadline Late-Night TV Is On The Precipice After CBS Axes Stephen Colbert; Insiders Lament 'End Of An Era' Stephen Colbert Riffs On Paramount's 'Big Fat Bribe' To Settle Donald Trump's CBS '60 Minutes' Lawsuit Former 'Late Show' EP Rob Burnett Reflects On Stephen Colbert Cancellation: "Never Threaten A Corporate Merger" While he was in Erie, he paid tribute to his old friend Stephen Colbert, whose Late Show was axed earlier this week by CBS. 'I love Stephen, I love his staff. I love that show. It's incredibly sad. I am partly excited to see what they're going to do for the next 10 months,' he reportedly said, per local news. 'It's terrible, terrible news for the world of comedy. Late-night shows mean a lot to me, not just because I work in them, but because even growing up in England, I would watch [David] Letterman's show, which of course was Stephen's show, and think about what a glamorous world that was. So, to have got to be on Letterman's show and Stephen's show has been always one of the most fun things, so it's very, very, very sad news. I look forward to seeing what he's going to do next because that man will not stop,' he added. Oliver has appeared multiple times on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert as well as the earlier iteration with David Letterman in 2015. He is the latest comedian and television host to offer his support following comments from other late-night peers including Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers and Andy Cohen as well as the likes of Anderson Cooper. Best of Deadline Streamer Subscription Prices And Tiers – Everything To Know As Costs Rise And Ads Abound (Hello, Peacock) - Update 'Stick' Release Guide: When Do New Episodes Come Out? 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series

New affordable housing opens in Aurora as city pushes to help those who work in the city be able to live there
New affordable housing opens in Aurora as city pushes to help those who work in the city be able to live there

CBS News

time12 minutes ago

  • CBS News

New affordable housing opens in Aurora as city pushes to help those who work in the city be able to live there

Aurora wants to keep people who work in Aurora in the city. But according to the city's most recent housing strategy report, you need to make more than $50,000 per year to afford the average rent in the city. The city says that's $10,000 more than the median renter's income. That's why city officials love a new affordable housing complex that opened Thursday. "I love it. It's really nice living here," said new resident Alfredo Salazar. He and his husband are newlyweds, and while they enjoyed all their wedding gifts, the apartment they got to move into right before their wedding was maybe the most exciting thing they got. "It was a gift for us. Thanksgiving Day to move in," said Salazar. Their home is in the brand-new Sapling Grove apartment complex at 10151 E. Jewell Ave, the city's newest affordable housing community. Mayor Mike Coffman says building affordable housing for people like Salazar is a top priority for the city. "What we want, in the city of Aurora, is that the people that work here can afford to live here," Coffman said. "So this- 81 units, in Sapling Grove, brings us a step forward." Six municipalities, including Aurora, recently sued Gov. Jared Polis, claiming that a recently signed executive order unconstitutionally takes away those cities' local authority over land use and zoning. Coffman says this completed project shows that Aurora doesn't need state oversight. "This project went forward without any mandates coming down from the state," Coffman said. "And we've committed to building our inventory of affordable housing 15% year over year, in the city with incentive from the state to do so." But political infighting doesn't concern most people looking for affordable housing, like Salazar and his husband, who hope that everyone can have a place of their own like they do. "This is our place. We decorated it," Salazar said. "Every single detail that you can see on this apartment- it's been done by the two of us with a lot of love."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store