2023 State of Homelessness Preview

Allison Zapata • April 20, 2023
VIRTUAL EVENT REGISTRATION

The Coalition for the Homeless of Houston/Harris County will host State of Homelessness on April 27, 2023.

The half-day conference will bring together partners of The Way Home, community members, and stakeholders to learn from local and national experts in the homeless response system.

The Day at a Glance

Our own Ashlie Young, manager of landlord engagement and performance artist, will return as this year’s Master of Ceremonies.

 

Coalition for the Homeless Vice Chair Chris Hanslik will kick things off at 9 a.m. with opening remarks. Then, Thao Costis of Harris County Community Services Department, will offer a reflection of the last ten years of The Way Home.


Next, Kelly Young of Career & Recovery Resources, Mercedes Sanchez of Harris County Precinct 2, and Sgt Theodore Perez of the Harris County Sheriff’s Office will offer a talk on Employ2Empower. What began as a 6 month pilot program in Precinct 2, Employ2Empower now encompasses all of Harris County, providing low-barrier employment opportunities to people experiencing homelessness.


Marc Eichenbaum of Mayor Sylvester Turner’s office, James Gonzalez of the CFTH, and Preston Witt of Harmony House will then take the stage to talk about the City’s housing navigation center, a new facility designed to provide people with a consistent, safe, and stable location to stay while they transition from homelessness to housing.


The Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program (YHDP) Panel will be moderated by our own Stefanie Quintela. Panelists will include Shun Johnson of TLC Health & Wellness, Joe Fuentes of Spring Branch Community Health Center, Youth Action Board Representative Kenny Easley, and Juliet Stipeche of Gulf Coast Workforce Board. The YHDP is a new initiative to prevent and end youth homelessness in our community.

 

The keynote address will begin just before noon, after a break for lunch. We are so thrilled to welcome this year’s keynote speaker, Michael Kimmelman, author of The New York Times article “How Houston Moved 25,000 People From the Streets into Homes of Their Own," who will tell us about his observations about Houston and the reaction to his article since it was published.

 

After the keynote, singers Cecila Duarte, Alejandro Magallón, Bin Yu Sanford, and Emily Treigle will perform excerpts from Houston Grand Opera’s Another City, followed by a Q&A with them and Jeremy Johnson and Alisa Magallón about their experience bringing the opera to life.  

 

Closing out the day, CFTH Vice President Sara Martinez will look to the next ten years of The Way Home.


If you are unable to attend the conference but would still like to support the efforts of Houston's homeless response system, please consider donating to the Coalition.

By Catherine Villarreal February 24, 2026
Houston, Texas (February 24, 2026) – This week, the nonprofit Coalition for the Homeless of Houston/Harris County (CFTH) is leading the annual Point-in-Time Homeless Count & Survey (“PIT Count”) to determine the number of people experiencing homelessness across Houston and throughout Harris, Fort Bend, and Montgomery counties. “We may see a slight uptick in the number this year, but we have a plan,” said Kelly Young, President & CEO of CFTH. “With the support of the City of Houston, Harris County, and private funders, we have been piloting new interventions to shorten the length of time people in our region experience homelessness. With adequate funding, we look forward to expanding those interventions to help people regain lives of self-determination.” CFTH coordinates the Houston region’s public-private homeless response system, The Way Home . Through this collaboration, The Way Home partners have successfully housed over 36,000 people since 2012. CFTH will release the results of Houston’s 2026 PIT Count in the summer, following independent verification by an epidemiologist. These findings will provide insight into how factors such as increases in the cost of living and the end of federal pandemic relief funding have impacted homelessness in our region. More information about the 2026 Point-in-Time Homeless Count & Survey The PIT Count offers a snapshot of how many people are experiencing homelessness in our region on a single night. This year, the “night of record” is Monday, Feb. 23. CFTH determines the number of people staying in shelters on that night by pulling records electronically from the Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) . The unsheltered count will be conducted on the following days, from Tuesday, Feb. 24 to Thursday, Feb. 26. More than 400 volunteers and staff of local nonprofit service provider partners will canvass the three-county region to survey people living unsheltered, using an app on their mobile devices. Results from the 2026 PIT Count will help gauge the progress of The Way Home’s ongoing collaborative efforts. It will also help CFTH and partner homeless outreach teams understand geographic shifts and target their outreach throughout the year. The PIT Count illuminates specific programmatic gaps and provides additional information needed to allocate resources most efficiently. The PIT Count is a requirement of the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) for the annual Continuum of Care (CoC) funding process. HUD furnishes the majority of funding for programs that provide housing and supportive services to people experiencing homelessness in the region. In 2024, HUD granted more than $71 million to the Houston area.
By Catherine Villarreal January 21, 2026
As lead agency to The Way Home Continuum of Care (CoC), CFTH is working with local governmental entities to advocate on behalf of people experiencing homelessness to ensure their needs are being considered as winter weather affects our region. We will make frequent updates as we receive information. Please check back often for the latest information. Last updated 02/01/2026 at 12:00 p.m.
By Fryda Ochoa September 9, 2025
While our system has helped thousands of people move from homelessness to housing, this year’s results highlight the need to broaden our approach.
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