Report Shows Homelessness Increased by 35% in Rhode Island Last Year

Despite historic levels of funding for housing, shelters, and supportive services, rates of homelessness continued to rise, according to the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness

Kimberly Simmons, executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness speaks at a news conference.
Kimberly Simmons, executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness speaks at a news conference.
Nina Sparling / The Public’s Radio
Share
Kimberly Simmons, executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness speaks at a news conference.
Kimberly Simmons, executive director of the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness speaks at a news conference.
Nina Sparling / The Public’s Radio
Report Shows Homelessness Increased by 35% in Rhode Island Last Year
Copy

The state of homelessness in Rhode Island remains grim, according to a newly released report from the Rhode Island Coalition to End Homelessness. More people reported experiencing homelessness this year than in 2023, and vulnerable groups, like families and people living outside, have seen particularly sharp increases.

“Shelters are overcrowded. Advocates are overwhelmed,” Wilma Smith, an advocate with lived experience of homelessness said at a news conference on Tuesday night. “And trying to get folks indoors before the reality of winter sets in. It’s unthinkable.”

Every year, a coalition of service providers and volunteers conducts a federally mandated census of the homeless population in Rhode Island, called a point-in-time count. The Coalition to End Homelessness uses those numbers, collected on a single night in January, to chart how homelessness changes year over year. This year’s point-in-time count showed that the number of homeless people in the state increased by 35% in 2023, to 2,442 people.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Funded largely by the CDC, the new Providence facility will track everything from STIs to PFAS to wastewater pathogens — with more space, better tech, and room to respond to the next health crisis
State officials in Rhode Island hope the life sciences will propel new economic growth in the state
A union official says it wants the hospitals’ management to do better than its ‘last, best offer’
The project is part of an effort to boost the life sciences in Rhode Island
Pawtucket officials unveiled the contents of two time capsules recovered during the demolition of McCoy Stadium