Minnesota's homeless population recorded its first significant drop since statewide counts began in 1991, according to a triennial count by the Wilder Foundation released Monday.
The latest count found 9,312 people who were homeless in the state on one night in October, compared to a peak of 10,214 in the last count in 2012. With that 9 percent drop, the number of homeless people counted statewide dipped below the number recorded in 2009.
"It does seem like a promising finding that the numbers are going down a little bit," said study co-director Michelle Gerrard, who cautioned that the counts should be regarded as minimums, given the difficulty of locating homeless people living outside shelters. She said an improving economy played a large role in the drop.
"The folks that recover last are our most impoverished population," she said.
But the latest count reveals a sharp contrast between Hennepin County, where homelessness dropped by 15 percent over the last three years, and Ramsey County, where it jumped 14 percent. Ramsey County officials couldn't be reached Monday for comment on that jump but Gerrard said it may represent the fluidity of homeless migration across the region.
"We've really tried to prevent more families from coming back to shelter," said Mikkel Beckmen, director of the Minneapolis/Hennepin County Office to End Homelessness.
Another difference between the two counties is the share of the homeless population living outside shelters — about one in seven homeless people counted in Ramsey County, compared to about one in 10 in Hennepin County.
Still recovering
Progress back to prerecession levels of homelessness was hailed as "a really great thing" by Tim Marx, president and CEO of Catholic Charities, which operates shelters and other services in both central cities. "This is an affirmation of the strategies that we've been pursuing for many years," Marx said.