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Forty-seven percent of Atlanta residents are Black, but the city commonly referred to as the Black Mecca had a homeless population in January that was 80% Black, according to the latest Point-In-Time homelessness census count released on Monday.
Of equal concern, on Jan. 27, the city logged 131 homeless families, an 18% rise from the same month last year. Roughly 90% of the individuals in those families were Black, down about 2 points from 2024.
Like many cities in America, Atlanta has seen an increase in homelessness — primarily fueled by Black people living on the margins — for a third consecutive year. But city leaders and advocates alike are touting that the rate of increase has slowed considerably.
The annual survey of homeless people in the metro area revealed a 1% rise in Atlanta’s overall homeless population. The city saw a 7% year-over-year increase in 2024, and a 33% surge in 2023.
The results from this year’s PIT count show the city’s homeless crisis appears to be “stabilizing,” according to Cathryn Vassell, CEO of Partners for HOME — the nonprofit that manages Atlanta’s PIT count on behalf of the federal government. Vassell told Capital B Atlanta that Black Atlantans remain overrepresented among individuals experiencing homelessness due to “continued disproportionate inequities” in the metro area.
The stark disparity underscores the ongoing economic challenges and affordable housing crisis many Black people face in a gentrifying metropolis fueled by a booming economy that has become known as the most unequal city in America.
“We know that there is gross income inequality that is disproportionate racially in our community as well,” Vassell said. “That is all contributing to the disproportionate representation of people of color in our system.”
The PIT count data showed Atlanta’s higher cost of living has fueled a sizable rise in the city’s number of homeless families this year despite signs that municipal leaders have reached a turning point in their battle to provide housing to people living on the margins.
Read More: Atlanta’s Largest Homeless Encampment Is About to Be Cleared
The nearly 27% rate of consumer price inflation in the Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell metro area between January 2020 and August 2024 was the third highest in the nation, according to a Pew Research study released in October.
The fact that 8 out of 10 homeless people are Black in a city known as a Black Mecca should “stop everyone in their tracks.”
Liliana Bakhtiari, Atlanta City Council member
“[The data] is a signal that the house is still on fire, and the scale of the crisis is bigger than what cities alone can handle,” Atlanta City Council member Liliana Bakhtiari told Capital B Atlanta after attending a briefing on this year’s PIT count last week.
The fact that 8 out of 10 homeless people are Black in a city known as a Black Mecca should “stop everyone in their tracks,” according to Bakhtiari.
“That’s not a coincidence, that’s the product of a system that’s failed Black families for generations — due to redlining, due to wage discrimination, due to mass incarceration, due to unequal access to healthcare and education,” she added. “Homelessness isn’t just a housing problem. It’s a justice problem.”
The report noted the strides the city has made addressing homelessness in recent years, citing that the overall homeless population has declined 30% since 2016 and about 11% since 2020 despite increasing for the past three years.
Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens has made increasing affordable housing and combatting homelessness two of his signature issues since taking office almost four years ago.
Last year, the Atlanta City Council allocated $60 million at Dickens’ request to addressing the growing homelessness problem. Those funds, Vassell said, are paying for construction of 500 rapid housing units for the homeless, including 40 apartments at the Melody Project, located in southern downtown Atlanta, and 23 at the Bonaventure, both of which opened last year.
Dickens’ office hasn’t responded to requests for comment.
Read More: Revamped Motel Gives Atlanta Unhoused Second Chance— But for How Long?
“By the end of the year we will have brought on 500 units from that $60 million,” Vassell said.
Unfortunately, Vassell warns, the progress Atlanta has made housing its homeless population could be undone later this year if President Donald Trump advances his plan for significant budget cuts.
The Trump administration has proposed cutting rental aid by 40% in its “Big, Beautiful Bill,” which the U.S. House approved in May. Vassell called the proposed cuts “terrifying” and said it could eliminate Atlanta’s permanent supportive housing and rapid rehousing programs funded through the city’s Continuum of Care resources. As many as 2,000 people could lose stable housing, according to Vassell.
“This would be a tragic impact across our community,” she said.
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Chauncey Alcorn is Capital B Atlanta's state and local politics reporter. More by Chauncey Alcorn
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