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From tiny houses to encampment sweeps, from proposed business taxes to small armies of volunteers, Seattle鈥檚 homeless crisis has sparked a series of possible solutions, along with controversy.

But often missing from conversations about 鈥渉omelessness,鈥 says the 91爆料鈥檚 , is attention to people who live in their vehicles.

More than 11,000 people are homeless in Seattle and King County, according to All Home鈥檚 . And according to more detailed data released May 31, people who live in a car, truck or camper make up about 40% of the nearly 5,300 people who are classified as 鈥渦nsheltered鈥 鈥 those who are not currently living in emergency shelter or transitional housing.

鈥淲e need to recognize that a significant number of people are relying on a vehicle as their long-term primary shelter. But giving them a parking ticket or a simple parking space won鈥檛 fix this,鈥 says Pruss, a doctoral candidate in the 91爆料 Department of Anthropology. 鈥淏y providing inclusive space for parking in our emergency shelter system, with direct access to their wraparound services such as employment assistance and health care, we can address ending homelessness for all, including those sleeping in their vehicles tonight.鈥

Pruss has been researching vehicle residency in Seattle for nearly a decade. He established the at Seattle University, as well as the methodology for counting the vehicle-resident population for All Home鈥檚 annual point-in-time count, conducted on one night each January. Pruss also contracts as the liaison for the unhoused community for the City of Seattle鈥檚 Department of Neighborhoods. He will defend his dissertation in June.

This informational flier, by Jamillia Lopez, is one of a series of social service outreach materials created through a collaboration with Pruss by 91爆料 Professor Karen Cheng’s design students in the 91爆料 School of Art + Art History + Design. Photo: Division of Design/91爆料 School of Art + Art History + Design

With nightly street-parking restrictions in industrial areas and a lack of services and infrastructure for this specific population, people who live in their vehicles are an overlooked community, subject to 鈥渟ettled bias that exposes vehicle residents to social disaffiliation and criminalization,鈥 Pruss says. He suggests the city include the vehicle resident population in its emergency shelter and services planning and, where appropriate, create safe parking areas, which would also provide hygiene facilities and direct connections to professional social services.

鈥淥ur job is to show that there鈥檚 an opportunity for stability,鈥 Pruss says. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 change the agency of the individual who sees their RV as a best choice for affordable housing, but we can offer healthier and more beneficial opportunities to that person and our communities.鈥

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For more information, contact Pruss at聽prussg@uw.edu.