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From YouTube: 100 Homes
Description
This October, more than 150 community volunteers and County staff went out into the streets to survey our County's homeless population as part of the 100 Homes for 100 Homeless Registry Project. And AVN's Up Close crew was with them.
B
C
D
E
If
we
can
ask
them
a
few
questions
about
their
lives
and
where
you
know
their
experiences
and
try
to
assess
who's
the
most
vulnerable
who's,
the
most
likely
to
die
on
the
streets
of
Arlington,
because
our
goal
is
to
rank
those
folks
identify
the
most
vulnerable
and
try
to
move
them
into
housing
with
supportive
services.
Basically,.
F
There's
a
data
group
that's
going
to
actually
put
in
the
data
information
that
we
get
from
the
surveys
on
a
daily
basis,
which
will
then
tell
us
how
many
people
we
actually
survey
and
identify
the
most
vulnerable.
We
also
have
persons
who
are
actually
working
with
headquarters
and
they're
going
to
work
with
us
to
basically
kind
of
keep
the
flow
of
traffic
going
here.
So
that
is
easy
day
and
a
productive
day
for
everybody.
I
want.
G
You
to
know
that
your
community,
your
government,
your
your
friends
and
your
neighbors,
have
helped
us
develop
an
infrastructure,
so
we
in
effect,
will
make
a
difference
where
we'll
be
able
to
end
homelessness.
I
believe
you
know
in
our
five
or
10
years
from
now
and
I.
Just
think
that
this
is
the
most
worthwhile
goal
you
should
be
pursuing
for.
A
I
H
J
I
J
You're
homeless
and
you're
struggling
and
you're,
trying,
like
per
se,
I've,
been
up
all
night
long
because
of
the
fact
it's
cold
out
here.
There
is
no
shelters
open
here
and
I
had
to
stay
up
and
because
I'm
too
embarrassed
to
sleep
like
other
people
in
the
Metro
on
the
floor,
where
it's
warm
I'm
not
gonna.
Do
that
not
if
I
can
help
it
so
I've
had
to
walk
around
all
night
long
because
there's
you
know,
that's
basically
how
it
is.
Well,
you.
H
Know
the
county
board's
been
working
really
hard,
as
we've
been
moving
through
site
plans
and
now
we're
going
to
get
more
site
plans
coming
in
as
the
economy
picks
up
and
each
one
that
has
housing.
We've
been
able
to
get
a
few
supportive
housing
units
which
are
really
the
place
is
that
these
folks
will
first
go
because
it
gives
them
a
home,
which
is
the
most
important
thing.
H
As
somebody
said
yesterday,
we
we
finally
figured
out
that
the
cure
for
homelessness
is
a
home,
so
we
start
with
the
home,
but
we
also
wrap
services
or
so
that
they
can
get
in
the
habit
of
paying
their
bills
and
making
their
appointments
and
all
of
those
kind
of
things
of
daily
living.
It
you
don't
think
about
until
you
don't
have
a
place
to
hide
the.
A
K
Well,
right
now,
the
group-
that's
in
this
room,
is
entering
the
data
from
all
of
the
surveys
that
were
conducted
on
the
street
this
morning
and
the
importance
of
the
data.
Is
it's
really
an
opportunity
for
us
really
to
identify
the
folks
that
are
sleeping
in
arlington
on
the
street
and
the
vulnerability
index
will
allow
us
to
rank
those
individuals
in
terms
of
like
who
is
truly
most
vulnerable
on
the
street
and
then
to
work
to
get
those
individuals
into
housing
as
soon
as
possible.
I.
L
Think
that's
just
so
important.
Arlington
is
an
incredible
community.
The
support
we've
had
at
organizational
level
to
the
individuals,
and
so
this
this
event
here
a
it's
very
important
in
terms
of
finding
who
are
the
really
most
vulnerable
of
the
people
on
the
streets,
but
it's
also
so
very
important.
It's
just
our
whole
community
awareness
of.
What's
going
on
the
room,
we're
not
a
large
community.
L
We
don't
have
the
kind
of
problem
that
some
of
the
bigger
cities
have,
but
we
have
a
real
problem
in
Arlington
of
homelessness
and
we
have
a
plan
and
we
have
people
working
on
it,
and
we
think
it's
really
great
that
so
many
people
were
learning
about
this
through
this
exercise.
But
again
the
most
important
is
getting
our
arms
around
those
folks
on
the
street
that
are
most
long
with
it.