News

Bubbles that fight trash, and a penguin chick surprise

1. United States

Veteran homelessness has declined in the U.S. Between 2010 and 2020, the number of veterans experiencing homelessness around the country halved. The 2022 Point-in-Time Count, a measure from a single night in January 2022 and the most recent data, shows an 11% drop between 2020 and 2022, from around 37,000 to 33,000 individuals.

In February, the Department of Veterans Affairs embarked on an ambitious effort to house the vast majority of homeless veterans. As of the end of September, the organization reported 34,373 housing placements.

Why We Wrote This

In this roundup, progress came from dogged effort and unique perspectives, not extraordinary science or concepts. The global examples range from trash cleanup and species recovery to easing conditions for people along an African border.

Alongside the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH), the VA has adopted a “Housing First” approach, which has seen success in cities like Houston. Individuals are placed in no-strings-attached housing, and then given the comprehensive support they need to stay housed. HUD credits $481 million in funding from the American Rescue Plan for accelerating programs.

Francine Kieffer/The Christian Science Monitor/File

Veteran Jack Rivers sorts through items at his former encampment home at Venice Beach in California, July 9, 2021.

“We made this progress during a global pandemic and economic crisis,” said USICH Executive Director Jeff Olivet. “Even under the most difficult circumstances, we can take care of each other and address homelessness.”

Sources: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of Veterans Affairs

2. Gambia

The Senegambia Bridge is proving the power of infrastructure to connect people. Truck drivers from Senegal carrying perishable goods used to wait hours and sometimes days for a ferry to carry them across the Gambia River, which separates northern Senegal from its southern Casamance region. Milk went bad; fresh fruit rotted. Even ambulances got stuck. To make matters worse, ferries only traveled in the daytime. Now, everyone from merchants to police officers can cross the bridge in a matter of minutes.

The Senegambia Bridge, financed by the African Development Bank was inaugurated in 2019 following decades of delays.

Easing the divide is important to West Africa’s stability, where Senegal is the only country of 15 to have never suffered a military coup. Recent developments have hinted at progress: In August, one rebel faction in the low-level, four-decade Casamance conflict signed a peace deal with the Senegalese government. And some see the bridge as a symbol of neighborly kinship following years of border tension between Senegal and Gambia. Sgt. Lamin Badjie, one of the Gambian military personnel stationed at the bridge, said, “It makes us more united. We’re the same people.” The bridge was financed by the African Development Bank and completed in 2019, when presidents of both countries traveled across the bridge in one car.
Sources: The New York Times, United States Institute of Peace

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