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Housing and Homelessness

Ever Wonder What It’s Like To Participate In LA’s Homeless Count? We Tagged Along With Volunteers To Find Out

A woman with a safety vest, black pants, and a gray beanie walks next to a woman with a black jacket and sweats and a man with a puffer jacket, jeans and a satchel. They walk by a brown and white wall. It's night time. They have a flashlight, a cell phone and a map in their hands, respectively.
Megan Imundo, Emilie Nordhues, and Dylan Sittig walk down an alley in Westwood during the homeless count on Jan. 25, 2023.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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L.A.’s annual homeless count relies on volunteers. This week, nearly 6,000 Angelenos helped count people experiencing homelessness throughout the region.

The count is a major undertaking that’s required across the country by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. In 2022, local volunteers struggled with a glitchy phone app, leading to concerns about the L.A. count’s accuracy. Under a settlement reached last year in federal court, the city of L.A. must provide shelter for 60% of unhoused people.

The results of this year’s annual homeless count will test the progress toward that goal.

We joined volunteers on one night of this year's homeless count. Here's how the night unfolded.

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10 p.m.: 150 volunteers gather

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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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The Brief

It’s Wednesday, Jan. 25. About 150 volunteers gather at the Westwood Presbyterian Church, which has served as a volunteer deployment site since 2005. Because the church is less than a mile away from UCLA, volunteers are often local students.

As the volunteers line up to check in, they grab some coffee and a snack.

A diverse crowd sits and stares toward the front of the room.
Volunteers gather at the Westwood Presbyterian Church, where they receive guidance before heading out.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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10:15 p.m.: Officials give instructions

L.A. City Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky and L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath thank volunteers for pitching in and emphasize that the work can’t be done without their support.

HOW TO VOLUNTEER
  • This year’s count is over and results are expected to be released by early summer. For updates on how to help with the 2024 count sign up here.

  • LAHSA also offers other volunteer opportunities, including for Angelenos who have experienced homelessness and want to share their insights.

Steve Sann, chairman of the Westwood Community Council and co-chair of the event, checks to make sure that everyone has downloaded a new phone app for the count designed to work with or without cell reception connectivity. Then, he goes over the rules for the night.

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Sann says it’s crucial not to disturb people experiencing homelessness during the count. “Don’t shine your flashlights on people … it’s rude.”

He also tells volunteers to take their time to cover their assigned areas thoroughly. “This is not a race,” he says. “I don’t want to see you back here in 35 minutes.”

A diptych. On the left the back of a person wearing a neon yellow safety vest that reads "Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count Volunteer." On the right a close up of a person holding a yellow safety vest and flashlight.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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10:45 p.m.: Split into groups

The volunteers divide into groups of three to five. At least one person per group gets a bright yellow vest and a flashlight. Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority staff also give each team a paper map. Before heading out, the volunteers huddle to decide whether to cover their routes on foot, or to share a car.

Four people, including one who wears a safety vest, huddle on a street corner at night. The street sign reads "Glendon Av."
Imundo, Nordhues, Howe and Sittig stand on a corner in Westwood, mapping out their route.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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Two white men stand in the night facing their backs to the camera. One of them holds a map and they both point at it.
Howe and Sittig plan their route .
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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11:15 p.m. Setting off on foot

LAist joins a group of four volunteers to shadow their night. We meet Megan Imundo, a doctoral student in the psychology department at UCLA, and Emilie Nordhues, a doctoral student in the university’s Near Eastern languages and cultures department. For both, it’s their first time helping with the count.

Imundo says she knows the data they gather will inform how officials and advocates allocate resources, “It seems like a really straightforward and important way to contribute to solutions to the crises in our neighborhoods.”

Nordhues says she’s seen the challenges people living on the streets in Westwood Village experience firsthand and she’d been looking for a “more material, impactful way to help out.”

Also here is Dylan Sittig, a staffer in L.A. City Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky’s office, and former Los Angeles Director of City Planning Con Howe. Sittig and Howe have participated in the count multiple times.

Sittig says Yaroslavsky’s office assigned staff members to join counts in different parts of the neighborhood to get a “comprehensive picture” of homelessness in Westwood.

The volunteers decide to cover their assigned route on foot.

A diptych of two photos. On the left there's a close up of a phone with an application open with buttons that read "camper/rv, makeshift shelter, notes." On the right there's a vertical photo of a person with short hair, glasses, and a black jacket looking towards their right while holding a phone in their hands.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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Amidst darkness there is a well lit parking structure. There's a silhouette of a man walking past the structure.
Howe, a member of Westwood Presbyterian Church, walks through a parking lot to check behind a dumpster.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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Four people stand near a railing at night looking down.
Imundo, Nordhues, Howe and Sittig look down at a parking structure.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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A person with short hair, black sweater, sweats, and glasses stands next to a white man with a puffer jacket, jeans, and a satchel. They are in an alley at night, lit by yellow street lamps. They log something into their phone.
Nordhues logs an unhoused person into the mobile app provided by LAHSA.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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Close up of someone's hands holding a map of a section of Westwood which is outlined in black ink.
Sittig takes stock of the route the group completed.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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Four people huddle in a dark driveway at night.
Imundo, Nordhues, Howe and Sittig huddle near an alley to discuss what's left on their route.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
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11:30 p.m.: Close attention to churches and stairwells

As the volunteers make their way through the avenues that cross Wilshire and Westwood Boulevards, they pay close attention to houses of worship and stairwells — places where people may be laying down to rest.

The volunteers also walk quietly through every alley. When they see a person experiencing homelessness, they make a gesture to Nordhues, who’s managing the app.

In addition to tallying the number of unhoused people, the app also keeps track of the volunteers’ progress, highlighting areas they still need to check. For backup, Imundo also has the app running on her phone.

People wearing safety vests that read "Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count Volunteer" walk into a church with a white facade and a cross that hangs at the entrance.
Volunteers at the 2023 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count return to Westwood Presbyterian Church after completing their routes.
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Samanta Helou Hernandez
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LAist
)

12:15 a.m.: A mostly silent survey

After checking to make sure that they covered their assigned tract, the volunteers head back to the church, scanning around in case they detect anyone new. When they notice one more person sleeping in front of the Westwood Branch Library, Nordhues updates the tally.

It’s been over an hour since the group started counting. The temperature is 51 degrees. So far, the volunteers have passed 10 people experiencing homelessness. The work is silent for the most part. The volunteers talk to each other but not the people they’re counting, most of whom are asleep on the ground. Some of them use cardboard to ward off the cold.

12:40 a.m.: Total counted is 12

The volunteers wrap up. The total count for this group is 12. In total, the volunteers walked just over two miles. They thank one another before going their separate ways.

If I were in this position, where would I be choosing to sleep?
— Megan Imundo, volunteer

Imundo reflects. She takes a public bus to UCLA every day, but normally tunes out. The count, she says, forced her to really look at every nook and cranny in her neighborhood. She also found herself wondering: “If I were in this position, where would I be choosing to sleep?”

Nordhues says the night went well – she had no trouble with the app. “It worked really smoothly,” she says. “I thought it was pretty easy to follow.”

She says she’ll likely volunteer in next year’s count, even though participating gave her “an odd feeling.”

“You know, you want to find people because it's important to track the numbers accurately so that the city has a sense of how many people there are and how many resources to give to the issue. But it's also, like, you don't want to find people, because those are people who are unhoused and in a very treacherous, unstable situation.”

Share your experience

Were you impacted by this year’s homeless count?
Are you experiencing homelessness or did you participate as a volunteer? We want to hear perspectives from all sides about what worked and what officials can do better.

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