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Alameda Countywide homeless and Special Needs housing Plan <br />Introduction <br />In Alameda County, an estimated 16,000 people experience homelessness over the course of a year. <br />Many homeless youth and adults are living with mental illness, substance use issues, I [IV/AIDS, <br />and/or other disabilities. More than one in four homeless individuals countywide is a child younger <br />than the age of 18. <br />Homelessness is a symptom of a wide range of challenges and characteristics in people who happen <br />to share the problem of lacking a permanent residence. The high cost of housing in Alameda County <br />both increases homelessness here, and is itself a barrier to preventing and ending homelessness. <br />According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, Alameda County is one of the ten least <br />affordable counties in the nation. <br />Both homelessness and H[V/AIDS affect people of color disproportionately. In particular, African <br />Americans constitute a higher proportion of people living with H[V/AIDS and people who are <br />homeless than of the general population of Alameda County. Nationally, people of color have been <br />shown to have less access to health care and worse health outcomes than Caucasians, due to factors <br />such as poverty and racism. <br />Homelessness is detrimental to physical and mental health, and leaves people vulnerable to violence <br />and exploitation. Homelessness also deprives the community of the full participation of adults and <br />children in school, at home, at work, and in the community. However, a number of local and <br />national programs have demonstrated successful interventions to assist people in achieving and <br />maintaining stable housing and improving their quality of life. <br />A substantial body of research documents that the costs to tax payers of providing intensive and <br />crisis services such as emergency rooms, medical and mental health hospitals, jails and prisons to <br />chronically homeless, seriously disabled people primarily because they do not have stable housing <br />are substantially higher than providing modest housing linked to appropriate support services. <br />This plan addresses the housing needs of persons who are homeless today, and those who are <br />among the most likely to be homeless tomorrow. The sponsors and stakeholders who developed this <br />plan recognize that people who are chronically homeless on our streets form the most visible and <br />seemingly intractable part of the homeless population. This plan outlines reorienting Alameda <br />County's housing and service systems to reduce and end chronic homelessness over the coming <br />decade. [n addition, by creating safe, decent, and affordable housing options for extremely low- <br />income people living with serious and persistent mental illness and/or HIV/AIDS who are <br />inappropriately or precariously housed, Alameda County can prevent future homelessness. <br />Without an effort of this magnitude to change Alameda County's housing and service delivery <br />systems and to address the underlying causes of homelessness-notjust react to its victims-the <br />chronically homeless on the streets today will be replaced by those who become homeless <br />tomorrow. <br />