The number of homeless students in the
US is the highest in over a decade according to a new study. Most of the 1.5
million homeless schoolchildren stayed with other families or friends after
losing their homes. But 7% lived in abandoned buildings or cars, the report by the National Centre for
Homeless Education showed. It is often caused by job
insecurity, unaffordable housing, domestic violence and recently the opioid
crisis. Living without a fixed address seriously impacts children's education
and health. Less than a third of homeless students were able to read
adequately, and scored even lower in mathematics and science, the report
showed. The most recent data was recorded in 2017-18 and was more than double
the nearly 680,000 homeless students reported in 2004-05, the director of National Centre for Homeless
Education told the New York Times.
The research measures the number of
children in schools who report being homeless at some point during an academic
year as such but does not show the total population of homeless young people in
the US.
Homeless Children In The USA |
Why is student homelessness increasing?
Homelessness is a growing problem in the US, usually
linked to the national housing crisis.
Millions of people spend more than half their income on
housing, and many report they cannot afford to buy a house.
Increasing rents and a housing shortage has forced
thousands of people in California to live in caravans or inadequate housing.
A changing economy, with factories closing down or the
rise of the insecure gig economy, also leaves parents unable to pay rent.
The opioid crisis, in which almost 2 million people are
addicted to prescription drugs, is also causing some families to break up or
children to be removed from their homes.
A disproportionate number of homeless
youth are LGBT, according to University of California
Williams Institute.
Nearly seven in 10 said that family rejection was a major
cause of becoming homeless, and abuse at home was another major reason.
Most homelessness experts say the solution lies in
providing more housing at affordable rates, as well as providing support to
families who may be affected by trauma or addiction.
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