Kayla Rosenfeld found herself probing intimate details of a stranger鈥檚 life Monday.
鈥淒o you like girls?鈥 she asked a homeless man in an effort to record his sexual preference.听After questions about his race, Rosenfeld asked about his gender聽identity.
鈥It was awkward,鈥 she said afterward. 鈥淚t sounds like a completely ridiculous question 鈥 to somebody who appears to be in their late 50鈥檚, 60s, to ask, 鈥榃ere you born a man?鈥”
Rosenfeld spent her day off surveying homeless people in Wahiawa for the 聽of Hawaii鈥檚 homeless population, conducted largely by volunteers.听Despite uncomfortable, moments, Rosenfeld said she was happy to be one of about 40 volunteers who gathered for the first day of the week-long effort to collect data on Hawaii鈥檚 homeless population.
Wahiawa-based nonprofit organized the count for central Oahu and the North Shore.听
After four hours of surveying in ditches, parks and sidewalks, Rosenfeld and other Wahiawa volunteers met at a church to debrief with ALEA Bridge Director Phil Acosta. He acknowledged the challenges faced by volunteers.
鈥淚t is very intrusive,鈥 Acosta said of the survey questions. 鈥淲e do have to make some effort to ask the question, even if it鈥檚 awkward.鈥
The data helps nonprofits and lawmakers measure the success of their homeless programs and understand the populations they serve.
The survey, a federal mandate, is by no means perfect.
It helped that one of ALEA Bridge鈥檚 volunteers, Joey Bagasol, speaks Illocano and Tagalog, the languages spoken by many Filipino immigrants to Hawaii.
鈥淲hen they start speaking their own language, they鈥檙e more comfortable,鈥 Bagasol said.
Volunteers put on neon yellow T-shirts before splitting up into groups of about 10 and venturing to different pockets of Wahiawa.
When one group fanned out around a homeless camp near Lake Wilson, it was difficult to know who should approach the homeless and who should hang back.
Being approached by a group of 10 eager surveyors might be overwhelming.
鈥淭he key with the volunteers is to make sure the homeless aren鈥檛 inundated with people,鈥 said Cora Rada, an outreach worker for ALEA Bridge who led one group of volunteers.
Still, Rada said that outreach workers don鈥檛 have the manpower to do the count on their own. 聽
Diane Nishijima and her husband were thwarted in their attempt to survey a man near Melemanu Park between Mililani and Wahiawa because their efforts coincided with a state homeless sweep in the area.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 really get to interview him because he was rushing to gather his personal stuff,鈥 Nishijima said.
If volunteers miss someone, they write down a description of the person and place, and someone from ALEA Bridge will return the following day. The organization鈥檚 outreach workers already know many of the homeless in the area.
One challenge is that it’s not always clear who鈥檚 homeless.
Rosenfeld鈥檚 group walked passed a man riding his bike slowly down the sidewalk.
His clean blue jeans, sneakers and the vest over his T-shirt showed no signs of wear and tear, but a volunteer at the end of the procession stopped to ask if he was homeless. The two spent the next five minutes filling out the point-in-time survey. 聽
The surveys only three to five minutes to complete, but a lot volunteers spend more time talking story with the people afterward.
One group in Wahiawa listened to a woman who cried as she talked about her life for聽45 minutes. A volunteer at the meeting afterward said it was the most meaningful thing she’d done all day.
Another recommended the surveyors carry tissues to offer in case people start crying.
Jen Stasch is the director of聽, a coalition of nonprofits that organizes the survey for Oahu.听Stasch describes the count is a rare opportunity for people in the community to get involved in Hawaii鈥檚 homeless crisis.
鈥Most people stand by helpless going, 鈥榃hat do I do? How do I help? How do I even formulate a solution?鈥 Well here鈥檚 one way you can help, get involved in point-in-time, help us collect the data,鈥 she said.
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