Tarps cover an electric generator and spare supplies at an encampment in Providence. The white tent in the background serves as a community kitchen with canned goods and a microwave.
Tarps cover an electric generator and spare supplies at an encampment in Providence. The white tent in the background serves as a community kitchen with canned goods and a microwave.
Nina Sparling/The Public’s Radio

Behind the Point-In-Time Count: Measuring Homelessness in Rhode Island

The results of the count inform decisions about federal funding, advocacy, and more

The results of the count inform decisions about federal funding, advocacy, and more

1 min read
Share
Tarps cover an electric generator and spare supplies at an encampment in Providence. The white tent in the background serves as a community kitchen with canned goods and a microwave.
Tarps cover an electric generator and spare supplies at an encampment in Providence. The white tent in the background serves as a community kitchen with canned goods and a microwave.
Nina Sparling/The Public’s Radio
Behind the Point-In-Time Count: Measuring Homelessness in Rhode Island
Copy

Last week, the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness conducted its annual Point-In-Time count, measuring how many people are experiencing homelessness across the state on a given night. Last year’s count showed a 35% increase over the previous year. Jennifer Barrera, chief strategy officer for the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness, was among the people conducting this year’s Point-In-Time count. The results of this year’s count will be released late this year, but Barrera spoke with morning host Luis Hernandez about what she saw, what’s behind the recent rise in homelessness, and possible solutions.

Interview highlights

On what she saw during the Jan. 21 Point-In-Time count

Jennifer Barrera:
This past Tuesday night was actually one of the coldest Point-In-Time counts that we’ve ever conducted here in Rhode Island. I’ve been doing the Point-In-Time count since 2016. The feel-like temperature was in the single digits. I was in Newport County. That evening was really challenging for us. We were dressed appropriately. We had weather-appropriate clothing, and we were able to get into our cars in between some of the sites that we were serving.

We found a couple of people in their vehicles. We found a couple of people that were sleeping outside. One person wasn’t asleep yet but was sitting on a park bench and just sort of bundled up with a lot of layers and blankets and had their belongings packed around them to protect them from the wind.

Conducting the Point-In-Time count reminds you, as someone working in the homeless response system, how critical the work that we do is how critical the weather is for people. It is so dangerous for people to be outside.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read/listen to the entire interview here.

Whether it’s national, local, new or an encore, here’s what to watch this April on Rhode Island PBS
Advocates for immigrants in New Bedford spoke out against an increase in reported ICE operations on the South Coast
‘His work was brilliant and I think, like so many artists, that was the most comfortable way he knew how to interface with the world’
As charitable giving priorities shift with new political climate, nonprofits revise appeals or return to old ones
Opponents argue bill is myopic of youth’s online needs. Regulators are worried about the heavy lifting involved
Survey respondents unhappy with his handling of economy, Ukraine and undermining democracy