Skip to main content
LA Homeless Services & Housing
Provider Resources
  • HOME
  • GET HELP
  • PROGRAMS

    • Unsheltered Response and Interim Housing
    • Housing Strategy and Solutions
    • Supportive Services
    • Clinical Services
    • System Planning and Coordination

    INITIATIVES

    • Skid Row Action Plan
    • Skid Row Care Campus
    • Capital Projects
    • Homelessness Prevention Unit

    MUNICIPAL RELATIONS

    • Local Jurisdictions
    • Unincorporated Areas
    • Unincorporated Areas Homeless Encampment Dashboard

    OUR PARTNERS

    • HSH intends to serve as a hub connecting all our partners so we can work and learn together.
    • View Our Partners
  • SUCCESS STORIES

    • Homelessness does not mean hopelessness. With support, people make their way home, heal, and thrive.
    • View Success Stories

    IMPACT DASHBOARDS

    • Measure A Progress Tracker
    • Key Performance Indicator Dashboard

    ACCOUNTABILITY

    • Quarterly Reports
    • Evaluations and Audits
    • Board Correspondence
    • Homelessness and Housing Cluster

    EVALUATION AGENDA

    • Read the Annual Evaluation Agenda to see how we're measuring and improving our investment impact.
    • View Evaluation Agenda
  • MEASURE A HUB
    • FY 2026-27 Measure A Spending Plan Process
    • FY 2025-26 Approved Funding Recommendations
    • Previous Budgets
  • GOVERNANCE
  • ABOUT HSH

    • Together with our partners, our mission is to lead a unified countrywide response to homelessness that combines housing, health, and social services.
    • Read About HSH

    DEPARTMENT TRANSITION

    • Community Engagement
    • Document Library
Home > How the homeless count is going high-tech

How the homeless count is going high-tech

Tents lined along a city street in Los Angeles, highlighting the ongoing challenges faced by individuals experiencing homelessness.

How the homeless count is going high-tech

How the homeless count is going high-tech https://homeless.lacounty.gov/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/homeless_Los_Angeles_BCB_4526-1-1024x681.jpg 1024 681 LA County Homeless Services & Housing LA County Homeless Services & Housing //homeless.lacounty.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/newHIlogo.png January 25, 2017 February 18, 2022

From thermal imaging to tailored questionnaires, Southern California counties are innovating how to better quantify and understand local homeless populations.

Around the region, annual and biannual homeless counts kick off this week. Thousands of volunteers are expected to canvass streets, shelters, ravines, underpasses and riverbeds throughout the county to talk to homeless people and count the total number.

The tallies, which are submitted to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, form a basis for receiving federal aid to address housing needs. They also present an opportunity for local governments to better assess who’s living on local streets.

This time around, counties are making some changes.

In preparation for the count, Orange County sent workers up in O.C. Sheriff’s Department helicopters, equipped with thermal imaging devices, to sweep over out-of-the-way places where homeless people might be sleeping so that volunteers know to go back to those areas during the count.

In 2015, volunteers tallied an estimated 15,291 homeless in Orange County, but the number may be larger.

“You’ve got rivers, you’ve got ravines, you’ve got state parks, you’ve got hills, you’ve got a lot of different things, and we just wanted to make sure that we were identifying where everybody was sleeping,” said Karen Williams, president and CEO of 2-1-1 Orange County, the non-profit tasked with running the census.

O.C. is also switching from paper to tablets this year.

“That should make a difference in terms of how quickly we can get the information,” she said. This year’s information will include specific data by city, as opposed to merely a county total.

In Los Angeles, the L.A. Homeless Services Authority will incorporate a new demographic into this year’s count—people staying in institutions like hospitals, jails and juvenile detention centers who are due for release soon and have nowhere to go.

Last year’s count tallied about 47,000 homeless in L.A. county. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s officials say roughly 3,000 jail inmates identify as homeless.

“Intuitively, we know it’s increasing,” said Captain Paula Tokar of LASD’s Population Management Bureau. Counting homeless behind bars is a relatively new task for the jails, brought on by a desire to connect departing inmates with services as they leave.

Other changes to L.A.’s count are also aimed at improving the quality of the county’s data.

Volunteers will expand demographic questions they ask the homeless. This year’s survey will include a category for those who identify as transgender or do not identify as any one gender. There will also be expanded questions regarding whether an individual has experienced domestic violence.

“We’ve also added a question for single adults: whether their pet ownership has been a barrier to them accessing shelter,” said Josh Decell, associate director for data integration at LAHSA.

L.A. is still seeking volunteers to help with the three-day count, which begins Tuesday. Other counties, Riverside, do a single-night count, which will take place Jan. 24. San Bernardino’s is Jan. 26. And Orange County’s is Jan. 28.

Don't miss an update. Subscribe to the newsletter now.

Our Address

655 Maple Avenue
Los Angeles, California 90014

Contact Us

Business Hours: Monday to Friday
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
General Information
Phone Number:
(213) 752-1900

Department

Get Involved Careers File a Complaint Meetings

Resources

Reports
News
Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Site Info

Accessibility
Disclaimer
Language
Privacy Policy
Records and Forms

LA County Seal

Do you need help?  211 LA County | Public Alerts
  • Home
  • What We Do
    • Encampment Resolution
      • A Full-Circle Solution
      • Pathway Home
      • Skid Row Action Plan
    • Housing
      • LA County’s Rehousing System
      • Opening Doors
      • Motel Recruitment
      • Affordable Housing
      • Interim Housing
      • Permanent Housing
      • Homekey
    • Services
      • Prevention
      • Street Outreach
      • Supportive Services
    • Municipal Relations
    • Unincorporated Areas
      • Unincorporated Areas
      • UA Homeless Encampment Dashboard
  • Emergency Response
    • State of Emergency
  • Impact
    • Measuring Impact
      • Success Stories
      • Impact Dashboard
    • Accountability
      • Quarterly Reports
      • Evaluations and Audits
      • Board Correspondence
      • Meeting Agendas
    • Get Involved
      • Resources
      • Jobs
  • Our Funding
    • Measure A
    • FY 2026-27 Measure A Spending Plan Process
    • FY 2025-26 Approved Funding Recommendations
    • Previous Budgets
  • Get Help
  • Newsroom
    • Media Inquiries
    • Latest News
    • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
      • The Homeless Initiative
      • Our Framework
      • Our Team
    • Our Partners
      • Local Jurisdictions
      • Continuums of Care
      • Departments
      • Faith-Based Organizations