News

Trump wants to lock up people with drug or mental health challenges. Advocates say lack of housing is the real problem.
Ohio housing advocates spoke out against President Donald Trump’s recent executive order that would force those experiencing ...
As someone honored by the opportunity to volunteer with a group that provides resources and a path to housing for unhoused ...
"We all become a target fairly quickly if we're targeting people who don't have anywhere to go," said Brenda Siegel, the ...
Leaders from the New Day Intake Center and the City of South Bend anticipate changes coming after President Trump's executive ...
"What are you going to do if you don't have a place to stay and you say, 'Get off the streets'? We're going to what, put them out in the sticks somewhere?" ...
The Trump administration has announced “a new approach” to ending homelessness that includes expanded police powers and mass incarceration.
Topline: L.A. County officials are concerned that major cuts could be coming to federal money that houses people in the region following a meeting with a high-ranking Trump administration appointee ...
The high-ranking federal housing appointee said they'd would be recommending that President Donald Trump “defund” Los Angeles, according to a county official. The federal housing agency has declined ...
A White House order calling for greater reliance on institutionalization threatens decades of precedent on disability rights, advocates are warning.
By Shameka Parrish-Wright Punishing people for being poor doesn’t make them less poor. And jailing someone who’s homeless doesn’t make them housed. But that’s exactly what President Trump’s new ...
Trump’s executive order on homelessness seeks to clear streets by allowing involuntary treatment, but experts warn it may worsen the crisis by neglecting root causes and funding.