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Florida’s camping ban may affect HUD’s homeless point-in-time count for 2025

Volunteers wait for their turn to canvass the Orlando Metro area at this year's PIT Count.
Homeless Services Network of Central Florida
Volunteers wait for their turn to canvass the Orlando metro area at this year's point-in-time count.

Experts say the fear of arrest may cause unhoused people to refrain from giving out the information necessary to collect an accurate count.

On Thursday, nearly 400 volunteers wrapped up this year’s homeless point-in-time count in the Orlando region.

Led by the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida, Orlando metro’s main federally funded agency to address homelessness, the annual count aims to gather a fairly accurate number for people experiencing unsheltered homelessness at a given point in time in the region.

However, the agency’s chief operating officer, Brian Postlewait, said the current state law and Orange County ordinance banning public sleeping and camping could potentially impact his team’s ability this year to get an accurate count.

“The enactment of HB1365 really has given us pause as we come into this count, and we're not certain what we're going to expect. We have a hunch that people feel the anxiety about being arrested for being on public property sleeping or camping. So, we're interested to find out if that really makes a difference in our point time count,” he said.

This annual, three-day task requires hundreds of volunteers to fan across Orange, Seminole and Osceola counties to count people they find either in the streets, in public property or in shelters. The count does not include people sleeping in cars or hotels, staying with friends and family, or in transitional housing.

The agency is responsible for the count and for sending their findings to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. This is how funding allotments and public awareness campaigns can be better planned to serve the needs of regions across the country. It also helps HUD determine a national count.

Last year’s count more than doubled from the previous one. This was in part due to a large volunteer force as well as an increase in local cases.

But Postlewait said the new laws have changed how many people approach the issue and how the community of unhoused people is reacting.

He said that, for the first time, the team is not sure what to expect.

“It could make people less willing to speak with us. This new law, we believe, is eroding trust between law enforcement and people experiencing homelessness; it is eroding trust between service providers and people experiencing homelessness. And this is the consequence of the draconian law that was enacted this year,” he said.

Results for the count will be published later this year.

Lillian Hernández Caraballo is a Report for America corps member. 

Copyright 2025 Central Florida Public Media

Lillian Hernández Caraballo
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