America
Number of homeless people in US hits record high
Washington, Dec 16
The number of homeless people in the US has increased by 12 per cent to a record high, a new government report revealed.
bout 653,000 people were homeless across the country in January, Xinhua news agency quoted the report issued by the Department of Housing and Urban Development on Friday.
That represents 70,650 more than a year earlier and the highest number since the survey began in 2007.
African-Americans account for 13 per cent of the US population, but make up 37 per cent of the total homelessness, the report said.
The largest jump in homelessness, it said, was among Hispanics, standing at 28 per cent from 2022 to 2023.
Family homelessness also rose by 16 per cent, reversing what had been a downward trend since 2012.
Soaring rents and a decline in coronavirus pandemic assistance are among the major factors behind the homelessness crisis in the US.
6 hours ago
India and US deepened defence ties during Pacific Commander's visit: US Embassy
6 hours ago
Munir gets desperate as Pakistan's relevance fades after failed US-Iran talks: Report
7 hours ago
Shashi Tharoor reveals Malayalam film 'Achappa’s Album' was shot at his ancestral home
7 hours ago
Preity Zinta: No woman wants to be a trophy
8 hours ago
Elon Musk and Sam Altman set for courtroom clash over OpenAI’s founding vision
9 hours ago
"I didn't rape anybody," says Trump in response to shooter's message
9 hours ago
Togo-flagged tanker with Indian crew on board attacked by Iran in Oman
10 hours ago
Come back home, Bharat needs your talent: Sridhar Vembu to Indians in US
12 hours ago
SC takes suo motu cognisance of alleged denial of emergency treatment to stabbed woman advocate
12 hours ago
Where is Vijayan? CM’s absence after polls fuels speculation in Kerala
12 hours ago
IMD warns of rising temperatures; doctors advise caution amid heatwave alerts
12 hours ago
SC rejects Antony Raju's plea to suspend conviction in 'underwear tampering' case
13 hours ago
'Religious thing': Trump claims 'anti-Christian' bias behind White House Correspondents' dinner shooting
