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How Denver met a goal to shelter 1,000 people

Denver Mayor Mike Johnston rang in the new year checking off a resolution from 2023.

Mr. Johnston announced that his team had met a goal of moving 1,000 unsheltered people from the street indoors by Dec. 31, fulfilling a pledge from his first full day in office in July. He initiated a state of emergency on homelessness that surged city resources, spending some $45 million last year on this House1000 plan.

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Caring for unhoused people is a challenge many cities face. Denver recently met a goal of sheltering people, using hotels and a micro-community. The effort offers hints of progress.

Some critics contend the plan doesn’t always prioritize the most vulnerable people for shelter. The arrival of over 37,000 migrants over the past year has also strained Denver’s bandwidth. Still, supporters of House1000 see seeds of progress on tackling homelessness that other cities can consider.

“I have been really impressed with Mayor Johnston’s focus and urgency,” says Jeff Olivet, executive director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. Sustaining this work, he adds, will mean curbing the pipeline into houselessness.

The Denver mayor’s team closed large street encampments first, sheltering most people in converted hotels and micro-community units.

After living in a Denver street tent, homeless for about six years, Christine Marie Oviedo says she’s getting used to four walls and a roof.

On the street, she says, “I was freezing to death.”  

One Colorado mayor rang in the new year checking off a resolution from 2023.

Denver Mayor Mike Johnston announced that his team had moved 1,000 unsheltered people indoors by Dec. 31, fulfilling a pledge from his first days in office last year. He had initiated a state of emergency on homelessness that surged city resources, spending some $45 million last year on this House1000 plan.

Some critics contend the plan doesn’t always prioritize the most vulnerable people for shelter. The arrival of over 37,000 migrants to his city over the past year – many ineligible for work permits, at least initially – has also strained Denver’s bandwidth. Still, supporters of House1000 see seeds of progress on tackling homelessness that other cities can consider.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Caring for unhoused people is a challenge many cities face. Denver recently met a goal of sheltering people, using hotels and a micro-community. The effort offers hints of progress.

“I have been really impressed with Mayor Johnston’s focus and urgency,” says Jeff Olivet, executive director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. Sustaining this work, he adds, will mean curbing the pipeline into homelessness.

A three-pronged approach, says Mr. Olivet, should involve prevention, the scaling up of stable housing and services, and ongoing street-level crisis response for those who are unsheltered. Denver officials, meanwhile, say they’re committed to expanding House1000 in 2024.

Hotels and a micro-community 

Homelessness is a persistent and growing problem in Denver as in many metro areas across the United States.

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