US veteran homelessness declines 5 pct in 2018 to 38,000

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In this Oct. 1, 2018 photo, Stormy Nichole Day, left, sits on a sidewalk on Haight Street with Nord (last name not given) and his dog Hobo while interviewed about being homeless in San Francisco. A measure on San Francisco's Nov. 6 ballot would levy an extra tax on hundreds of the city's wealthiest companies to raise $300 million for homelessness and mental health services. It's the latest battle between big business and social services advocates who say that companies such as Amazon, Google and Salesforce can afford to help solve severe inequities caused by business success. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

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SAN DIEGO (AP) — The number of homeless veterans across the U.S. declined more than 5 percent over the past year after a slight rise in 2017.

The departments of Housing and Urban Development and Veterans Affairs announced Thursday that the number of homeless vets dropped to about 38,000.

The veteran homelessness count happened in January.

The number was about half of those counted in 2009.

The departments say as many as 64 communities and Virginia, Delaware and Connecticut effectively ended veteran homelessness.

That means all homeless veterans in those areas had been offered homes, even if some didn’t accept them.

The Obama administration set a goal of ending veteran homelessness by 2015.

Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson says the Trump administration will not set a specific date to reach that goal.