No Room at The Inn –

After reading about “homeless sweeps” occurring across all Hawaiʻi, I thought I’d try an experiment to evaluate the availability of emergency shelters in each County.

I went online, searched “homeless shelters” and “homeless services” in all four Counties, and started making phone calls. My goal was to help a fictional homeless couple searching for a safe place to sleep.

After over 20 phone calls, I could not find a single shelter on ANY island that could tell me they had a place for this couple to sleep.

My fictional homeless couple was invited to come down for an “intake interview,” after which they’d be put on a waiting list. I was also told, repeatedly, “There’s nothing available tonight,” and no promises for tomorrow or the next day.

If you’re a single male and don’t mind sleeping next to a bunch of other single males, there might be a place for you. First, however, you must come in for an evaluation. Only then will you know whether or not you’ll have a bed for the night.

80% of my telephone calls were answered by machines that required me to navigate through various responses and ultimately leave a message for a return call.

My first call to an organization purportedly offering statewide support for the homeless yielded this message: “The service you are calling is not available from this location. If this is an emergency, please dial 911.”

I searched online for the organization and found another number.

After navigating an unnecessarily complex AI menu — “Press 1, Press 2, Press 3, please complete the short survey” — I was eventually connected to a human, who gave me another number for a family emergency shelter.

No one answered there, and I was directed by an answering machine to leave a message. I then called the men’s shelter, thinking that if the couple had to split and stay in different shelters, that still might be acceptable.

The person answering at the men’s shelter told me the homeless man I was trying to help had to come down in person for an interview to determine whether there was space at the shelter for him or not.

I was trying my darnedest just to find a place for two people to sleep for the night, and was completely unable to do so. Unfortunately, the situation in every county was the same.

The 2024 Hawaii Homeless Point In Time census counted 6,389 people statewide experiencing homelessness. 62% or 3,961 of those individuals were unsheltered.

The entire inventory of emergency shelter beds on all islands COMBINED is less than 2,500.

Imagine: You’re homeless, living in your car, at the beach, in the woods, on the road… and YOU’RE the one making desperate phone calls (assuming you have a phone) and navigating a system that doesn’t have any beds available anyway.

Imagine the police coming through in the middle of the night, telling you to “move along.”

Where are you supposed to go???

There’s literally NO LEGAL PLACE for you to sit, lie down or sleep.

There’s no affordable housing, no beds available at emergency shelters. There’s not even a legal place for you to park your car and sleep overnight, let alone a campground with bathrooms and perhaps a shower.

And yet you’re told to move along.

We can, and must do better.

The lack of adequate shelters and related services and staffing is an EMERGENCY.

We must dramatically expand funding, staffing, and facility support for the obviously overworked and under-resourced providers of homeless services. They’re valuable members of our community, working in sometimes the darkest and most depressing of circumstances — and they deserve full-throated and tangible support from both State and County government.

Emergency homeless shelters and related services must be made a priority.

And we must STOP THE SWEEPS until that happens.

Gary Hooser
For those interested: Here is my very first piece on the Homeless written in 1997 entitled Leave Jeffrey Alone – about a man who lived on the beach at the bottom of the hill from where I live.

Another of my blog piece’s that try’s to put it all into perspective Getting rid of all those homeless people – A primer

Note: In my research I could find no evidence that validates the persistent rumors that other states or municipalities are sending us their homeless and houseless people. READ Are other states sending their homeless people here?

Also, while it’s true that some of the unsheltered do not like the “rules and structure” they must follow at the shelters – the fundamental fact of the matter is that our emergency shelters on every island are full and have waiting lists of people who DO want to use the shelter as a safe place to sleep. We must expand the number of beds and rooms and we must increase support for staffing and related services.

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About garyhooser

This blog represents my thoughts as an individual person and does not represent the official position of any organization I may be affiliated with. I presently serve as volunteer President of the Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action (H.A.P.A.) www.hapahi.org I am the former Vice-Chair of the Democratic Party of Hawaii. In another past life, I was an elected member of the Kauai County Council, a Hawaii State Senator, and Majority Leader, and the Director of Environmental Quality Control for the State of Hawaii - in an even earlier incarnation I was an entrepreneur and small business owner. Yes, I am one of the luckiest guys on the planet. Please visit my website AND sign up for my newsletter (unlike any email newsletter you have ever gotten, of that I am sure) - http://www.garyhooser.com/#four “Come to the edge.” “We can’t. We’re afraid.” “Come to the edge.” “We can’t. We will fall!” “Come to the edge.” And they came. And he pushed them. And they flew. - Christopher Logue (b.1926)
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3 Responses to No Room at The Inn –

  1. Chris Rathbun's avatar Chris Rathbun says:

    Now imagine that your son in law, who has a serious drug problem, comes to you saying he needs help and wants to go to rehab. You know the widow is limited; once those cravings take control he is going to bail and find some drugs. See if you can find a bed for him before he gives up and goes back on the street, eventually dying from his addiction.

    (You don’t need to try this experiment with a fictional character, I’ve already done it for you with a real one.)

    Homeless services are not the only service our state is desperately lacking.

    • garyhooser's avatar garyhooser says:

      Yes Chris, I know your story is a real one and drug treatment facilities are desperately lacking in our state.
      While serving in the State Senate, I will never forget the calls I would get from parents who were literally sitting next to their children who were begging for help…pleading for some in-house treatment facility to take them in – and there were none who could do so as all the beds were full. We can and we must do better in so many areas.

  2. Wil's avatar Wil says:

    Right on, Gary. The least we can do is provide bathrooms and access to showers–but they have to be safe. Actually, tourists wouldn’t mind that either.

    For 50 years the money has moved upward. You are I are among the very lucky who have been educated and determined enough to achieve a financial level that, probably an inadvertent oversight, gives us benefits from many of the loopholes and policies that help the rich as well.

    Humane treatment is the least we can do.

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