Skip to content

June 23, 2026
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
cropped-cropped-cropped-Essex-News-web-banner.jpg

Essex County's Local Source

Primary Menu
  • HOME
  • IN THE TOWNS (A-L)
    • BELLEVILLE
    • BLOOMFIELD
    • CALDWELL
    • CEDAR GROVE
    • COUNTY NEWS
    • EAST ORANGE
    • ESSEX FELLS
    • FAIRFIELD
    • GLEN RIDGE
    • IRVINGTON
    • LIVINGSTON
  • IN THE TOWNS (M-Z)
    • MAPLEWOOD
    • MILLBURN
    • MONTCLAIR
    • NEWARK
    • NORTH CALDWELL
    • NUTLEY
    • ORANGE
    • ROSELAND
    • SOUTH ORANGE
    • VERONA
    • WEST CALDWELL
    • WEST ORANGE
  • SPORTS
    • BELLEVILLE
    • BLOOMFIELD
    • EAST ORANGE
    • ESSEX FELLS
    • GLEN RIDGE
    • IRVINGTON
    • MAPLEWOOD
    • MONTCLAIR
    • NORTH CALDWELL
    • NUTLEY
    • ORANGE
    • ROSELAND
    • SOUTH ORANGE
    • WEST CALDWELL
    • WEST ORANGE
  • ARTS / EVENTS
  • BUSINESS NEWS
  • OBITUARIES
  • OPINION
  • PAY A BILL
  • PUBLIC NOTICES
    • Place Notices
    • Search Notices
    • Legal Notice Compliance
    • HELP / FAQ
  • UNION NEWS DAILY
  • Home
  • IN THE TOWNS
  • ESSEX COUNTY NEWS
  • Report indicates homelessness declined by 9.4 percent in New Jersey

Report indicates homelessness declined by 9.4 percent in New Jersey

Editor December 26, 2022 5 minutes read
277 views

WASHINGTON, DC — The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development released on Dec. 19 its 2022 annual Homeless Assessment Report Part 1 to Congress. The report found that there were 582,462 people experiencing homelessness in the United States on a single night in January 2022. The report can be read at tinyurl.com/2tde7vje. 

In New Jersey, the yearly point-in-time count found 8,752 people experiencing homelessness in January 2022, a 1.3-percent decrease from 2020. 

These data reflect a single-night snapshot of homelessness in America in early 2022 and the first complete single-night count of people experiencing homelessness since the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The point-in-time count is one measure of homelessness that the federal government uses. The yearly count captures people who are in sheltered settings and unsheltered — sleeping on the streets, in encampments, vehicles or other places not meant for human habitation. The PIT count is not meant to capture the entire universe of everyone who experiences homelessness over the year; it provides a reliable way to measure whether homelessness is going up or down from year to year and a way to compare homelessness across communities. 

COVID-19 and its impacts on the economy could have led to significant increases in homelessness. Investments, partnerships and outreach by government agencies led to only a .3-percent increase in the number of people experiencing homelessness nationwide from 2020 to 2022, according to HUD. The rate of overall homelessness is due in large part to a robust federal response that prevented evictions through emergency rental assistance distributed to more than three million households, expanded resources for vulnerable families through the child tax credit and other financial transfers through stimulus. 

According to HUD, the Biden-Harris administration intends to not only stop but reverse the post-2016 trend of rising homelessness and reduce it 25 percent by 2025, as stated in “All In, The Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness,” which was released Dec. 19 by the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness and can be read at tinyurl.com/yc5b3aey.

Some national statistics are: Compared with 2020, homelessness among people in shelters declined by 1.6 percent. Homelessness among people in unsheltered settings increased by 3.4 percent. Veterans experiencing homelessness decreased by 11 percent, a 55-percent decrease since 2010. Between 2020 and 2022, families with children experiencing homelessness declined by 6 percent, marking a total decline of 36 percent since 2010, and there was a 12-percent decrease in the number of people under the age of 25 who experienced homelessness on their own as “unaccompanied youth.” 

“HUD and everyone in the Biden-Harris administration is committed to ensuring everyone has a safe, stable place to call home. Data shows that homelessness remains a national crisis, but it also shows that the historic investments this administration has made to address this issue can work,” HUD Secretary Marcia L. Fudge said. “The Biden-Harris administration is committed to systemically addressing homelessness and combating the systemic racism that has created racial and ethnic disparities in homelessness.” 

“Homelessness and its devastating effects on individuals, families and children are always top of mind at HUD. We are committed to doing everything we can to reduce the number of New Jerseyans without a home,” said Alicka Ampry-Samuel, HUD regional administrator for New York and New Jersey. “While the statistics in New Jersey are optimistic, HUD will not stop until we see a more significant reduction in homelessness. HUD will continue to provide funding and available resources so that the number of homeless individuals continues to decline.” 

In New Jersey in 2022, there are 7,776 people in shelters; compared with 2020, homelessness among people in shelters declined by 105, or 1.3 percent. In 2022, there were 976 homeless people in unsheltered settings, a decrease of 805 people. The point-in-time count found 479 veterans experiencing homelessness in 2022, down 116, or 19.5 percent. Households with children experiencing homelessness declined by 8.2 percent; 992 were counted in January — 89 fewer than in 2020. And, 438 people under the age of 25 experienced homelessness on their own as “unaccompanied youth,” a 14.8-percent decrease, or 76 fewer than in 2020.  

HUD defines chronic homelessness as an individual who has experienced homelessness for a year or longer or has experienced at least four episodes of homelessness in the last three years and has a disability. 

In New Jersey, the 2022 point-in-time count found 1,521 chronically homeless individuals, 82 fewer than in 2020, a 5.1-percent reduction in chronic homelessness. 

Nationwide, the overall number of people experiencing homelessness in 2022 increased slightly compared with 2020. Homelessness rose significantly for individuals, people with disabilities who experience long-term homelessness and people in unsheltered settings. Single individuals that are not part of family households continue to represent the largest group of people experiencing homelessness. Homelessness among single individuals increased by 3.1 percent. The number of chronically homeless individuals increased by 16 percent between 2020 and 2022. 

There continues to be an overrepresentation of people who identify as black, African American or African, as well as indigenous people, including Native Americans and Pacific Islanders, among people experiencing homelessness. 

The data shows that overall homelessness remained relatively unchanged despite the economic challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic.

About the Author

Editor

Editor

Editor

View All Posts

What do you feel about this?

Post navigation

Previous: Chinese language student at Glen Ridge HS wins leadership award
Next: US attorney reaches settlement with NJ Transit regarding ADA compliance

Author's Other Posts

Achieve celebrates its volunteer tutors MAP-Tutors Celebrated1-C

Achieve celebrates its volunteer tutors

June 17, 2026 30
West Orange basketball star/NCAA champion Elliot Cadeau honored by Essex County B-HOOPS-WO Cadeau honor

West Orange basketball star/NCAA champion Elliot Cadeau honored by Essex County

June 18, 2026 50
Bloomfield band director, teacher is charged with sexual assault BLM-Daniel Burbank Bloomfield Teacher Charged -BW

Bloomfield band director, teacher is charged with sexual assault

June 17, 2026 77
East Orange Campus High School graduates its Class of 2026 with Photo Gallery EO-EOCHS Graduation1-C

East Orange Campus High School graduates its Class of 2026 with Photo Gallery

June 17, 2026 82

Related Stories

WO-Mock Abduction1-C
4 minutes read

Child abduction simulation is carried out at South Mountain Reservation

Joe Ungaro June 11, 2026 124
WRESTLE-BHS Quamina2
4 minutes read

Men of Essex Inc. honors athletes at 67th annual Essex Awards

Editor June 10, 2026 127
ART-MARIZA-C
8 minutes read

Essex/Union County Entertainment Calendar

Editor April 8, 2026 326
EO-Scholars Breakfast1
3 minutes read

Bishop with Orange, West Orange ties feted by Scholarship Fund

Editor March 25, 2026 427
IRV-Justin Funeral12-C
4 minutes read

Call for justice in death of child

Joe Ungaro March 18, 2026 537
EC-Sherrill Endorsement11-C
3 minutes read

Sherrill in West Orange to endorse DiVincenzo in executive race

Editor March 11, 2026 386

LOCAL SPORTS

Bloomfield HS track and field athletes garner Super Essex Conference honors TRACK-BHS track honors 1

Bloomfield HS track and field athletes garner Super Essex Conference honors

June 17, 2026 28
Glen Ridge HS girls lacrosse team wins state championship G-LAX-GR state final1 2

Glen Ridge HS girls lacrosse team wins state championship

June 17, 2026 36
Joelle Bernhard excited to be new Bloomfield HS girls soccer head coach G-SOCCER-BHScoachBernard 3

Joelle Bernhard excited to be new Bloomfield HS girls soccer head coach

June 17, 2026 45
Glen Ridge’s Melissa Meyer keys Montclair Kimberley Academy softball squad to banner season SOFT-MKA Meyer 4

Glen Ridge’s Melissa Meyer keys Montclair Kimberley Academy softball squad to banner season

June 17, 2026 50

SIGN UP to receive weekly Local Alerts by email

* indicates required

You may have missed

WO-Soccer Tournament2-C
3 minutes read

Soccer fun is able to raise funds

Cynthia Cumming June 17, 2026 21
BLM-Super Retiring-C
5 minutes read

Superintendent retiring after 50 years

Daniel Jackovino June 22, 2026 45
TRACK-BHS track honors
2 minutes read

Bloomfield HS track and field athletes garner Super Essex Conference honors

Joe Ragozzino June 17, 2026 28
MAP-Tutors Celebrated1-C
3 minutes read

Achieve celebrates its volunteer tutors

Editor June 17, 2026 30
  • ABOUT US
  • CONTACT US
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • FIND A NEWSPAPER
  • PUBLIC NOTICES
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • PAY A BILL
  • MONTHLY NEWSPAPERS
  • Login
Created by Worrall Media. Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved.