Latest news with #CenterforHumanDevelopment
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Number of older homeless adults increased nearly 20% this year in Hampden County
SPRINGFIELD — More and more, Center for Human Development homeless outreach workers in the state's western four counties are seeing an uptick in older homeless adults. That's according to Will Dávila, CHD's vice president of diversion, shelter and housing. 'I can tell you we've been increasingly concerned over the last year or two,' he said. 'We've seen slowly the numbers creeping up.' Across all age groups, homelessness increased this year in Hampden County compared to 2024. For adults 55 and older, the annual percent increased by 18.4%, several points higher than the bump to the overall population, according to preliminary data from an annual point-in-time count conducted in January. The counts are coordinated at the local level but done across the country, and data is reported to the federal government. It was the second year in a row in which the older adult group's numbers increased more than the overall homeless population, said Gerry McCafferty, the city's housing director and the point person for the Springfield-Hampden County Continuum of Care. On the night the census was taken this past January, 34 people aged 55 and older were sleeping on the streets in the county, while 133 in that age group were sheltered, the preliminary data shows, according to McCafferty. Rising homelessness among older adults is a nationwide problem. One study in 2019 predicted the number of homeless people over the age of 65 would almost triple by 2030. Dennis P. Culhane, one of the researchers and a professor in the University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy and Practice, told NPR earlier this year that the actual increase has been 'slightly higher than we predicted.' Some reasons for the increase: Baby boomers are aging, and there's a lack of affordable housing. 'I can speculate,' McCafferty said, speaking of the possible reasons for the uptick. 'Many older adults lived on fixed incomes. They are on Social Security or other retirement, and rents have gone up tremendously. I think that there likely is a greater challenge of affordability, as rents went up, and incomes did not go up. I think there is a good likelihood a lot of it has to do with housing affordability.' John Baker is a community health worker who does homeless outreach for Mercy Medical Center in partnership with the city. He is seeing some older adults on fixed incomes who have been pushed out onto the streets by rent increases. 'The math doesn't sustain itself,' he said. He also sees older people on the streets with co-occurring mental health or substance use problems. It's hard enough to be homeless in your 30s or 40s, Baker said. 'It's much more difficult when you're in your 60s or 70s.' Some older homeless adults have aged while experiencing chronic homelessness, service providers said. Anecdotally, McCafferty also is hearing about more older adults who are homeless for the first time. Baker and Dávila are seeing that in their work, too. 'It's concerning,' Dávila said. Dávila also worries about how possible cuts to social service programs could worsen the situation. 'On top of what we're already seeing, if benefits to these folks are eliminated, and rents go up, you're going to have a perfect storm for many more homeless individuals,' he said. 'It's all going to converge at a very unfortunate moment.' 'His mercy was never returned': Jordan Cabrera sentenced to 12-15 years for fatally shooting Jahvante Perez This is how much untreated wastewater went into the Connecticut River last year PVPC working on two-decade plan for bikers and pedestrians Big Y recalls made-to-order sandwiches for salmonella concerns Read the original article on MassLive.
Yahoo
23-02-2025
- General
- Yahoo
InFocus: Point-In-Time annual survey of unhoused persons in Massachusetts
CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) – The housing crisis has created a growing number of homeless individuals and families, nationwide. According to the Western Massachusetts Network to End Homelessness, Massachusetts ranked fifth in overall homelessness numbers and saw the third-highest increase among all states in 2024. The reasons for this increase are varied: growing numbers of newly arrived refugees and migrant families, soaring rents, and the lack of affordable housing. Center for Human Development conducts 'point-in-time count' of homeless individuals in Chicopee and Holyoke The Point-in-Time Count is a national initiative by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that conducts a count of sheltered and unsheltered people experiencing homelessness on a single night in January. On Wednesday, January 29, teams from the Center for Human Development (CHD) and other community partners called Continuums of Care (CoCs) surveyed the streets of Springfield, Chicopee, and Holyoke to see how many people in those cities are unsheltered. This week on 22News InFocus we'll be talking about this recent survey and what it found. Watch 22News InFocus Sunday at noon, and if you miss any of the programs, you can find them here on our website, WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.