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Volunteers Count Contra Costa's Homeless

About 120 volunteers took part in the biennial homeless count conducted by Contra Costa Health Services Wednesday morning, visiting encampments around the county in a two-hour push. With a Patch video.

It was cold enough to see your breath in the air when volunteers headed out just before dawn Wednesday morning to help count Contra Costa's homeless population. But it was even colder for 54-year-old Rory — who had slept the night unsheltered on the banks of Walnut Creek in Concord.

"I called the shelter, but they were full," he said, tucked into his sleeping bag amid a fort of cardboard boxes.

The 120 volunteers were bundled up in thick coats as they paired up two to a car, each with a map of an area to cover. They would drive around for two hours — stopping by bridges, tunnels, fields and back alleys to tally the number of homeless people sleeping outside and mark down their ages.

The biennial count organized by Contra Costa Health Services is a government requirement, according to Lavonna Martin, acting director of the homeless program. The figures are used to assess funding needs, said Martin, but also to determine the effectiveness of current homeless outreach programs and identify future needs. The count aims to cover the entire county and takes place in a single morning.

Volunteers fill out a brief tally chart for each person they encounter living "unsheltered," listing gender, age, the composition of family units and the type of encampment — including occupied vehicles as well as hand-built structures.

"There's an increased focus this year on transition-age youth," said Martin, explaining that the county has seen an increase in the number of 14-to-24-year-olds experiencing homelessness.

At a camp by Highway 4 in Concord, a middle-aged couple welcomed outreach workers into the "home" they have built under a bridge. See the accompanying video in the media box above. The woman, who gave her name as Teresa, said that she lost her job in retail and has been homeless since October. Thanks to her partner's disability income, the couple are not as hard up as most other homeless people, she said, and have been able to construct a relatively comfortable living space — complete with a "bedroom" inside a tent with a queen bed, a kitchen area with a stove, and a heater. She said that she doesn't fit the stereotype of what a homeless person looks and lives like, and that the government needs to see a distinction between those who are actively trying to get off the streets and those who "just want to sit around and do nothing."

The 2011 homeless count identified 1,490 "unsheltered" homeless people — down from 1,872 in 2009. Almost 70 percent were living in encampments. An additional 2,784 were classed as "sheltered" in emergency housing and other programs.

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Palermo May 20, 2013 at 03:32 pm
I have found it's very hard to find a parking spot there. Another negative is the number of theRead More "constant outsdoorsmen" types lurking all around. I've been confronted several times and worried about leaving my car there.
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Beau Behan May 17, 2013 at 09:36 am
Hi Robert, Thanks for dropping in and checking out the blog. The new Patch look is so 'new' as I amRead More still learning to navigate through. Just updated it and added the link to my film review. Thanks again. Cheers!
Robert Rothgery May 17, 2013 at 09:30 am
I am happy to know that Mr. Behan's review of "STID" is now available. Might we knowRead More where it is available? Perhaps I am just an Apple lovin' technopeasant, but despite my frantic serial clicking on text without links, I could not find the actual story. Alas and alack I may never know why there is no darkness in "...Into Darkness" (or Lightness). Oh, and welcome back Jim!
Palermo May 20, 2013 at 03:30 pm
The main reason I don't go to any of the businesses downtown is the lack of parking. What littleRead More there is is taken up by the owners of these establishments. God forbid they park somewhere else less convenient so actual paying customers can frequent their businesses.
Captain Bebops May 19, 2013 at 09:47 am
Jim, then that's yet another penalty for showing up for jury duty. The system needs a big overhaul.Read More
Jim Caroompas May 19, 2013 at 09:27 am
The city is no longer paying for juror parking. In other words, juror or not, if your meter hasRead More expired, you pay.