News

Since Kentucky criminalized street camping, citations average more than one per day - mostly in Louisville and Lexington.
New research from New York University found that if families were cut off after two years, 1.4 million households could lose their vouchers and public housing subsidies — largely working families with ...
Kentucky could lose about $286 million in federal housing funding - out of about $651 million in current funding - under a ...
LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) - July 15 marks one year since the “Safer Kentucky Act” took effect. The law made sweeping changes to the state’s criminal landscape. Among them, it makes sleeping or camping in ...
Some advocates and service providers say the law is punishing Kentuckians experiencing homelessness rather than helping them.
Tuesday marked the one-year anniversary of the passage of House Bill 5, also known as the "Safer Kentucky Act." Front line homeless services providers say the bill's ban on "unauthorized street ...
As homelessness rises in Kentucky, especially outside the two largest cities, the Trump administration wants to cut hundreds ...
Whether you realize it or not, someone you know depends on domestic violence services that are at risk because of uncertain ...
Some council members are looking to reassert their authority over homeless services, by rescinding the emergency declaration and regaining oversight over homeless spending.
Gov. Gavin Newsom called Monday for cities to crack down on homeless encampments. It's a move toward criminalizing homelessness that may clean up streets, but doesn't solve the problem.
Almost 500 people are homeless across Butler County, far more than in any other rural or suburban county in the state.
As rates of homelessness rise in the US, experts are calling for urgent reforms that recognize housing as a core component of health care. Each night, nearly 800,000 individuals are unhoused ...