
AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin
"Cueball," left, talks about his dog Lindsay with neighbor Terry Reed, right, at their tents Friday, May 20, 2022, in Phoenix. Hundreds of homeless people die in the streets each year from the heat, in cities around the U.S. and the world. The ranks of homeless have swelled after the pandemic and temperatures fueled by climate change soar.
PHOENIX (AP) — Hundreds of blue, green and grey tents are pitched under the sun’s searing rays in downtown Phoenix, a jumble of flimsy canvas and plastic along dusty sidewalks. Here, in the hottest big city in America, thousands of homeless people swelter as the summer’s triple digit temperatures arrive.
The stifling tent city has ballooned amid pandemic-era evictions and surging rents that have dumped hundreds more people onto the sizzling streets that grow eerily quiet when temperatures peak in the midafternoon. A heat wave earlier this month brought temperatures of up to 114 degrees (45.5 Celsius) – and it’s only June. Highs reached 118 degrees (47.7 Celsius) last year.
“During the summer, it’s pretty hard to find a place at night that’s cool enough to sleep without the police running you off,” said Chris Medlock, a homeless Phoenix man known on the streets as “T-Bone” who carries everything he owns in a small backpack and often beds down in a park or a nearby desert preserve to avoid the crowds.
“If a kind soul could just offer a place on their couch indoors maybe more people would live,” Medlock said at a dining room where homeless people can get some shade and a free meal.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin
A homeless encampment grows in size just west of downtown Friday, May 20, 2022, in Phoenix.
Excessive heat causes more weather-related deaths in the United States than hurricanes, flooding and tornadoes combined.
Around the country, heat contributes to some 1,500 deaths annually, and advocates estimate about half of those people are homeless.
Temperatures are rising nearly everywhere because of global warming, combining with brutal drought in some places to create more intense, frequent and longer heat waves. The past few summers have been some of the hottest on record.
Just in the county that includes Phoenix, at least 130 homeless people were among the 339 individuals who died from heat-associated causes in 2021.
“If 130 homeless people were dying in any other way it would be considered a mass casualty event,” said Kristie L. Ebi, a professor of global health at the University of Washington.
It’s a problem that stretches across the United States, and now, with rising global temperatures, heat is no longer a danger just in places like Phoenix.
This summer will likely bring above-normal temperatures over most land areas worldwide, according to a seasonal map that volunteer climatologists created for the International Research Institute at Columbia University.
Last summer, a heat wave blasted the normally temperate U.S. Northwest and had Seattle residents sleeping in their yards and on roofs, or fleeing to hotels with air conditioning. Across the state, several people presumed to be homeless died outdoors, including a man slumped behind a gas station.
In Oregon, officials opened 24-hour cooling centers for the first time. Volunteer teams fanned out with water and popsicles to homeless encampments on Portland’s outskirts.
A quick scientific analysis concluded last year’s Pacific Northwest heat wave was virtually impossible without human-caused climate change adding several degrees and toppling previous records.
Even Boston is exploring ways to protect diverse neighborhoods like its Chinatown, where population density and few shade trees help drive temperatures up to 106 degrees (41 Celsius) some summer days. The city plans strategies like increasing tree canopy and other kinds of shade, using cooler materials for roofs, and expanding its network of cooling centers during heat waves.
It’s not just a U.S. problem. An Associated Press analysis last year of a dataset published by the Columbia University’s climate school found exposure to extreme heat has tripled and now affects about a quarter of the world’s population.
This spring, an extreme heat wave gripped much of Pakistan and India, where homelessness is widespread due to discrimination and insufficient housing. The high in Jacobabad, Pakistan near the border with India hit 122 degrees (50 Celsius) in May.

AP Photo/Manish Swarup
Homeless people sleep in the shade of an overbridge on a hot day in New Delhi, Friday, May 20, 2022. The Indian capital and surrounding areas are facing extreme heat wave conditions.
Dr. Dileep Mavalankar, who heads the Indian Institute of Public Health in the western Indian city Gandhinagar, said because of poor reporting it’s unknown how many die in the country from heat exposure.
Summertime cooling centers for homeless, elderly and other vulnerable populations have opened in several European countries each summer since a heat wave killed 70,000 people across Europe in 2003.
Emergency service workers on bicycles patrol Madrid’s streets, distributing ice packs and water in the hot months. Still, some 1,300 people, most of them elderly, continue to die in Spain each summer because of health complications exacerbated by excess heat.
Spain and southern France last week sweltered through unusually hot weather for mid-June, with temperatures hitting 104 degrees (40 Celsius) in some areas.
Climate scientist David Hondula, who heads Phoenix’s new office for heat mitigation, says that with such extreme weather now seen around the world, more solutions are needed to protect the vulnerable, especially homeless people who are about 200 times more likely than sheltered individuals to die from heat-associated causes.
“As temperatures continue to rise across the U.S. and the world, cities like Seattle, Minneapolis, New York or Kansas City that don’t have the experience or infrastructure for dealing with heat have to adjust as well.”
In Phoenix, officials and advocates hope a vacant building recently converted into a 200-bed shelter for homeless people will help save lives this summer.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin
Mac Mais, 34, who has been homeless on and off since he was a teen, sits inside a converted vacant building turned into a 200-bed shelter for homeless people recently opened shown Friday, May 20, 2022, in Phoenix.
Mac Mais, 34, was among the first to move in.
“It can be rough. I stay in the shelters or anywhere I can find,” said Mais who has been homeless on and off since he was a teen. “Here, I can stay out actually rest, work on job applications, stay out of the heat.”

AP Photo/John Locher
A homeless man cools off in fountain along the Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas on Thursday, May 26, 2022.
In Las Vegas, teams deliver bottled water to homeless people living in encampments around the county and inside a network of underground storm drains under the Las Vegas strip.
Ahmedabad, India, population 8.4 million, was the first South Asian city to design a heat action plan in 2013.
Through its warning system, nongovernmental groups reach out to vulnerable people and send text messages to mobile phones. Water tankers are dispatched to slums, while bus stops, temples and libraries become shelters for people to escape the blistering rays.
Still, the deaths pile up.
Kimberly Rae Haws, a 62-year-old homeless woman, was severely burned in October 2020 while sprawled for an unknown amount of time on a sizzling Phoenix blacktop. The cause of her subsequent death was never investigated.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin
A homeless man works a sign as he sits next a monument to homeless people who have died Wednesday, April 27, 2022, in Phoenix.
A young man nicknamed Twitch died from heat exposure as he sat on a curb near a Phoenix soup kitchen in the hours before it opened one weekend in 2018.
“He was supposed to move into permanent housing the next Monday,” said Jim Baker, who oversees that dining room for the St. Vincent de Paul charity. “His mother was devastated.”

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin
Jim Baker, who oversees that dining room for the St. Vincent de Paul charity, sits in the dining room after dinner Wednesday, April 27, 2022, in Phoenix.
Many such deaths are never confirmed as heat related and aren’t always noticed because of the stigma of homelessness and lack of connection to family.
When a 62-year-old mentally ill woman named Shawna Wright died last summer in a hot alley in Salt Lake City, her death only became known when her family published an obituary saying the system failed to protect her during the hottest July on record, when temperatures reached the triple digits.
Her sister, Tricia Wright, said making it easier for homeless people to get permanent housing would go a long way toward protecting them from extreme summertime temperatures.
“We always thought she was tough, that she could get through it,” Tricia Wright said of her sister. “But no one is tough enough for that kind of heat.”
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Justin Sullivan // Getty Images
The causes and conditions that lead to homelessness are varied and complex. Issues like domestic abuse, addiction, financial hardship, eviction, disabilities, and mental illness can contribute to or cause an often sudden change in living situations that can leave adults, children, families, or veterans without shelter, food, or medical care.
According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness, 567,715 people were homeless in 2019. Being that these are the most recent available numbers on a national level and that the COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on the world’s population in 2020, those numbers could potentially be much higher in 2020 and 2021. Homeless individuals already suffer from chronic medical conditions at a rate much higher than housed individuals, and the pandemic has put the most vulnerable members of an already vulnerable population at greater risk.
The issue of homelessness also has disproportionate effects on minority populations. LGBTQ youth experience one of the highest rates of homelessness, with 40% of individuals accessing services identifying as being LGBTQ.
Much of the funding for state programs comes from federal grants provided by the United States Office of Housing and Urban Development. Though federal funds are accessed for services other than those that provide shelter as their primary resource, many homeless shelters, food banks, and free or low-cost medical clinics remain functional through multiple funding and staffing streams, including the utilization of volunteer workers, private donations, and corporate partnerships. Medical services in particular receive little funding from federal sources.
Though there are ample phone numbers to call, from local 211 hotlines to national crisis centers, many homeless people experience challenges accessing resources, transitioning into programs—some of which have stringent protocols to maintain alcohol and drug abstinence—or participate in other treatment programs. Stacker compiled a list of resources in each state that help house and serve local homeless populations using a variety of government, private, charitable, nonprofit, and academic sources.
Click through to find out how your state is helping alleviate homelessness.
[Pictured: An aerial view of San Francisco's first temporary sanctioned tent encampment for the homeless on May 18, 2020.]
You may also like: U.S. cities with the dirtiest air
Justin Sullivan // Getty Images
The causes and conditions that lead to homelessness are varied and complex. Issues like domestic abuse, addiction, financial hardship, eviction, disabilities, and mental illness can contribute to or cause an often sudden change in living situations that can leave adults, children, families, or veterans without shelter, food, or medical care.
According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness, 567,715 people were homeless in 2019. Being that these are the most recent available numbers on a national level and that the COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on the world’s population in 2020, those numbers could potentially be much higher in 2020 and 2021. Homeless individuals already suffer from chronic medical conditions at a rate much higher than housed individuals, and the pandemic has put the most vulnerable members of an already vulnerable population at greater risk.
The issue of homelessness also has disproportionate effects on minority populations. LGBTQ youth experience one of the highest rates of homelessness, with 40% of individuals accessing services identifying as being LGBTQ.
Much of the funding for state programs comes from federal grants provided by the United States Office of Housing and Urban Development. Though federal funds are accessed for services other than those that provide shelter as their primary resource, many homeless shelters, food banks, and free or low-cost medical clinics remain functional through multiple funding and staffing streams, including the utilization of volunteer workers, private donations, and corporate partnerships. Medical services in particular receive little funding from federal sources.
Though there are ample phone numbers to call, from local 211 hotlines to national crisis centers, many homeless people experience challenges accessing resources, transitioning into programs—some of which have stringent protocols to maintain alcohol and drug abstinence—or participate in other treatment programs. Stacker compiled a list of resources in each state that help house and serve local homeless populations using a variety of government, private, charitable, nonprofit, and academic sources.
Click through to find out how your state is helping alleviate homelessness.
[Pictured: An aerial view of San Francisco's first temporary sanctioned tent encampment for the homeless on May 18, 2020.]
You may also like: U.S. cities with the dirtiest air
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Kristi Blokhin // Shutterstock
Calling 211 is the first step for many seeking assistance for basic housing, food, and health care needs in Alabama. Various local shelters and food assistance programs are available throughout the state, one being Homeless to Independence, which provides necessary supplies for homeless individuals and families.
Kristi Blokhin // Shutterstock
Calling 211 is the first step for many seeking assistance for basic housing, food, and health care needs in Alabama. Various local shelters and food assistance programs are available throughout the state, one being Homeless to Independence, which provides necessary supplies for homeless individuals and families.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Marc Cappelletti // Shutterstock
Marc Cappelletti // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Dreamframer // Shutterstock
Dreamframer // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
W. Scott McGill // Shutterstock
W. Scott McGill // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Ruben A Martinez // Shutterstock
California offers numerous programs to help individuals and families who are experiencing homelessness. As of March 2020, there is a newly created program specifically to help those who have contracted or are at risk of contracting COVID-19.
Ruben A Martinez // Shutterstock
California offers numerous programs to help individuals and families who are experiencing homelessness. As of March 2020, there is a newly created program specifically to help those who have contracted or are at risk of contracting COVID-19.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Jen Phillips // Shutterstock
Resources for housing, employment, and child care are available throughout Colorado. Whether they’re for families or single individuals, for the Native American population, or those with substance use issues, there are specific programs available to provide assistance.
Jen Phillips // Shutterstock
Resources for housing, employment, and child care are available throughout Colorado. Whether they’re for families or single individuals, for the Native American population, or those with substance use issues, there are specific programs available to provide assistance.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
Dialing 211 can provide access to various services in Connecticut. The state provides programs for people in need of rental assistance, permanent housing, mental health treatment, and more.
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
Dialing 211 can provide access to various services in Connecticut. The state provides programs for people in need of rental assistance, permanent housing, mental health treatment, and more.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Nagel Photography // Shutterstock
Accessing local programs in Delaware involves utilizing a state-run network of service providers. Emergency housing, financial assistance, and support services can be accessed through the Delaware Division of State Services website.
Nagel Photography // Shutterstock
Accessing local programs in Delaware involves utilizing a state-run network of service providers. Emergency housing, financial assistance, and support services can be accessed through the Delaware Division of State Services website.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
KMH Photovideo // Shutterstock
Florida provides resources for the homeless through the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Feeding America, and the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans. Access to those programs, along with specific locations and contact numbers, can be found by contacting the Florida Coalition to End Homelessness.
KMH Photovideo // Shutterstock
Florida provides resources for the homeless through the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Feeding America, and the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans. Access to those programs, along with specific locations and contact numbers, can be found by contacting the Florida Coalition to End Homelessness.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Real Window Creative // Shutterstock
Real Window Creative // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
cleanfotos // Shutterstock
The University of Hawai’i at Manoa has compiled a comprehensive list of resources for homeless people throughout the state. Among the available options are programs to help house those with mental health issues and free medical services for the uninsured.
cleanfotos // Shutterstock
The University of Hawai’i at Manoa has compiled a comprehensive list of resources for homeless people throughout the state. Among the available options are programs to help house those with mental health issues and free medical services for the uninsured.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Charles Knowles // Shutterstock
Homeless individuals in Idaho are able to access aid through federal programs. The average wait time for a response to a rental assistance application is 12-24 months. For financial education, legal support, immediate eviction mediation, and housing support, organizations like Jesse Tree may be able to help in a matter of days.
Charles Knowles // Shutterstock
Homeless individuals in Idaho are able to access aid through federal programs. The average wait time for a response to a rental assistance application is 12-24 months. For financial education, legal support, immediate eviction mediation, and housing support, organizations like Jesse Tree may be able to help in a matter of days.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Diego Mariottini // Shutterstock
Help is available in Illinois through its Department of Human Services. The state connects individuals with services to prevent homelessness, provide emergency COVID-19 housing, and protect homeless youth.
Diego Mariottini // Shutterstock
Help is available in Illinois through its Department of Human Services. The state connects individuals with services to prevent homelessness, provide emergency COVID-19 housing, and protect homeless youth.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
A comprehensive list of local services is provided in the Indiana Coalition for Homeless Intervention & Prevention’s Handbook of Help. Services for veterans, the Latinx community, LGBTQ individuals, and more are listed within.
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
A comprehensive list of local services is provided in the Indiana Coalition for Homeless Intervention & Prevention’s Handbook of Help. Services for veterans, the Latinx community, LGBTQ individuals, and more are listed within.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Suzanne Tucker // Shutterstock
Suzanne Tucker // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Steven Frame // Shutterstock
Steven Frame // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Katherine Welles // Shutterstock
Katherine Welles // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Jacob Boomsma // Shutterstock
Federally funded agencies in Louisiana list ways to contact and connect with local resources in the state. Various municipalities provide localized services, some of which include emergency housing, street outreach teams, and services for victims of domestic violence.
Jacob Boomsma // Shutterstock
Federally funded agencies in Louisiana list ways to contact and connect with local resources in the state. Various municipalities provide localized services, some of which include emergency housing, street outreach teams, and services for victims of domestic violence.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
The Maine State Housing Authority lists emergency shelters by county. Its Stability through Engagement (STEP) program provides short-term rental assistance to individuals in order to assist them in finding more stable, permanent housing.
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
The Maine State Housing Authority lists emergency shelters by county. Its Stability through Engagement (STEP) program provides short-term rental assistance to individuals in order to assist them in finding more stable, permanent housing.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Grindstone Media Group // Shutterstock
The Michigan State Housing Development Authority provides assistance to “extremely low-income households” who meet all application requirements. Their 811 Project Rental Assistance program lists two locations that provide housing, making a total of 12 units available. More resources are available through localized community programs.
Grindstone Media Group // Shutterstock
The Michigan State Housing Development Authority provides assistance to “extremely low-income households” who meet all application requirements. Their 811 Project Rental Assistance program lists two locations that provide housing, making a total of 12 units available. More resources are available through localized community programs.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
3841128876 // Shutterstock
Services for homeless or disabled individuals are easily accessible in Minnesota through the Hub, a comprehensive database organized by the state. Resources are separated by county, and individuals seeking assistance can connect with support workers through online chats, by email, or by calling during business hours.
3841128876 // Shutterstock
Services for homeless or disabled individuals are easily accessible in Minnesota through the Hub, a comprehensive database organized by the state. Resources are separated by county, and individuals seeking assistance can connect with support workers through online chats, by email, or by calling during business hours.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
Sean Pavone // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
amadeustx // Shutterstock
amadeustx // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Paul Brady Photography // Shutterstock
Paul Brady Photography // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Scrugglegreen // Shutterstock
Scrugglegreen // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Joseph Sohm // Shutterstock
According to The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, 7,169 individuals, including 1,285 youths without adult supervision, were homeless in Nevada in January 2019. The Nevada Homeless Alliance connects individuals needing support with providers. Services include emergency shelter and employment assistance.
Joseph Sohm // Shutterstock
According to The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, 7,169 individuals, including 1,285 youths without adult supervision, were homeless in Nevada in January 2019. The Nevada Homeless Alliance connects individuals needing support with providers. Services include emergency shelter and employment assistance.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
The state of New Hampshire provides information about local housing and assistance programs through a 211 hotline. There are six shelters providing specialized programs for youth, substance use treatment, pregnant women, and female ex-offenders.
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
The state of New Hampshire provides information about local housing and assistance programs through a 211 hotline. There are six shelters providing specialized programs for youth, substance use treatment, pregnant women, and female ex-offenders.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
FotosForTheFuture // Shutterstock
FotosForTheFuture // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
TierneyMJ // Shutterstock
TierneyMJ // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Kevin Ruck // Shutterstock
Kevin Ruck // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Real Window Creative // Shutterstock
Real Window Creative // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
W. Scott McGill // Shutterstock
W. Scott McGill // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
brian legate // Shutterstock
brian legate // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Stephen B. Goodwin // Shutterstock
A variety of services can be accessed through a list of contacts at the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless. The coalition hotline provides assistance in multiple languages to meet the needs of a wider number of residents. The Rhode Island Food Bank has a map of resources, including local support organizations and food banks that supply meals and groceries.
Stephen B. Goodwin // Shutterstock
A variety of services can be accessed through a list of contacts at the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless. The coalition hotline provides assistance in multiple languages to meet the needs of a wider number of residents. The Rhode Island Food Bank has a map of resources, including local support organizations and food banks that supply meals and groceries.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Grindstone Media Group // Shutterstock
Grindstone Media Group // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Sopotnicki // Shutterstock
Sopotnicki // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Mike Holp // Shutterstock
For housing assistance and additional services, individuals in Texas can call 211 or reach out to Texas Health and Human Services. Resources are provided for each local area and provide services for adults with mental illness and families in need. Both permanent housing programs and temporary shelters are available.
Mike Holp // Shutterstock
For housing assistance and additional services, individuals in Texas can call 211 or reach out to Texas Health and Human Services. Resources are provided for each local area and provide services for adults with mental illness and families in need. Both permanent housing programs and temporary shelters are available.
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Johnny Adolphson // Shutterstock
Johnny Adolphson // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Always Wanderlust // Shutterstock
Always Wanderlust // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
A G Baxter // Shutterstock
A G Baxter // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Real Window Creative // Shutterstock
Real Window Creative // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Paul Brady Photography // Shutterstock
Paul Brady Photography // Shutterstock
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Liberal US cities change course, now clearing homeless camps
Gagliardi Photography // Shutterstock
Gagliardi Photography // Shutterstock