Co-published with ProPublica.
Tabitha Davis had just lost twins in childbirth and was facing homelessness. The 23-year-old had slept on friends’ floors for the first seven months of her pregnancy, before being accepted to a temporary housing program for pregnant women. But with the loss of the twins, the housing program she’d applied to live in after giving birth intended for families was no longer an option.
A few weeks later, Davis was informed that the score she’d been given based on her answers to San Francisco's "coordinated entry" questionnaire wasn’t high enough to qualify for permanent supportive housing. It was a devastating blow after an already traumatizing few months.
Why are people living on the streets not getting indoors? In more than 1,600 cases, they’ve been approved for housing but not gotten in while hundreds of rooms sit ready, but empty. Reporter Nuala Bishari investigated for the Public Press and @propublica. Co-published with ProPublica. This series was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership […]
A process called coordinated entry, used by cities across the country, is meant to match homeless people with housing. In San Francisco’s version, the system could be making it harder for some populations to get indoors.
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