A new âsolutionâ to student homelessness: A parking lot where students can sleep safely in their cars
A new âsolutionâ to student homelessness: A parking lot where students can sleep safely in their cars
When Edgar Rosales Jr. uses the word âhome,â the second-year college student with a linebackerâs build isnât referring to the house he plans to buy after becoming a nurse or getting a job in public health. Rather, the student at Californiaâs Long Beach City College is talking about the parking lot he slept in every night for more than a year. With Oprah-esque enthusiasm, Rosales calls the other students who use LBCCâs Safe Parking Program his âroommatesâ or âneighbors.â
Between 8 and 10:30 p.m., those neighbors drive onto the lot, where staff park during the day. Nearby showers open at 6 a.m. Sleeping in a car may not sound like a step up, but for Rosales â who dropped out of a Compton high school more than 20 years ago to become a truck driver â being handed a key fob to a bathroom stocked with toilet paper and hand soap was life-altering. He kept the plastic tab on his key ring, even though he was supposed to place it in a drop box each morning, because the sight of it brought comfort; the sense of it between his fingers, hard and slick, felt like peace.
When Rosales and his sonâs mother called it off again in the fall of 2024, just after heâd finished a GED program and enrolled at LBCC, he stayed with his brother for a week or so. But he didnât want to be a burden. So one day after work at the trucking company â heâd gone part-time since enrolling, though heâd still regularly clock 40 hours a week â he circled the block in his beat-up sedan and parked on the side of the road, near some RVs and an encampment. The scariest part of sleeping in his car was the noises, Rosales told : âI heard a dog barking or I heard somebody running around or you see cop lights going down the street. You see people looking in your car.â He couldnât sleep, let alone focus. Without the ability to bathe regularly, he began to avoid people to spare them the smell. The car became his sanctuary, but also, a prison. As he put it, âIt starts messing with your mental health.â
First, Rosales dropped a class. A few weeks later, he told his LBCC he couldnât do it anymore and needed her help to withdraw. Instead, she got Rosales signed up for the collegeâs Safe Parking Program, and everything flipped on its head. With the LBCC lotâs outlets and WiFi, the back seat of his car morphed into a study carrel. Campus security was there to watch over him, not threaten him like the police had, telling him to move along or issuing a citation that cost him a dayâs pay. For the first time in a month, Rosales said, âI could just sleep with my eyes closed the whole night.â
Forty-eight percent of college students experience housing insecurity, meaning âchallenges that prevent them from having a safe, affordable, and consistent place to live,â suggests the most recent from the Hope Center at Temple University. That number rises to 60% for Black students, 67% for students who are parenting and 72% for former foster youth. The problem also tends to be worse for and those who identify as LGBTQ+ or have been labeled undocumented, said Sara Abelson, an assistant professor and the Hope Centerâs senior director of education and training. Fourteen percent of the nearly 75,000 students surveyed experienced homelessness, the most severe form of housing insecurity. Other analyses similar estimates.
Of course, rates differ by institution. The Hope Center found that housing insecurity at two-year schools, like LBCC, was about 10 percentage points higher than at their four-year counterparts. A similar gap divides institutions that serve high proportions of students classified as racial and ethnic minorities from those that donât. Geography also matters: Itâs much to find a rental unit in Wilmington, North Carolina, for example, than in Portland, Oregon. And yet, the problem is a national one, said Jillian Sitjar, director of higher education for the nonprofit SchoolHouse Connection, affecting both rural and urban areas and ânot just a California thing.â Thatâs partly because of a and the fact that eligibility rules for affordable housing programs students; and itâs partly because the nationwide as both government investment in higher education and the purchasing power of financial aid have fallen . The second Trump administrationâs to Pell Grants, the largest federal student aid program, havenât helped, nor have its generally and erosion of to housing.
For years, colleges have primarily referred students experiencing homelessness to shelters, nonprofits and other external organizations, but âthereâs kind of a shift thatâs happening,â Sitjar said: âInstitutions are starting to look internally, being like, âOK, we need to do more.ââ LBCCâs Safe Parking Program is one of the most visible of a new crop of programs addressing student housing insecurity by giving students unorthodox places to sleep: cars, hotels, napping pods, homes of alumni and even an assisted living facility. What sets these stopgap efforts apart from longer-term strategies â initiatives to , (including ), students, cover housing gaps (like summer and holidays) and â is that theyâre designed to be flawed. College administrators know full well that Band-Aid programs are insufficient, that theyâre catching blood rather than addressing the source of the bleeding. And yet, while long-term projects are , whatâs woefully inadequate can be quite a bit better than nothing.
An oversize sink sure was for Mike Muñoz. Decades before earning his doctorate and becoming the president of LBCC, Muñoz was a community college student who worked in a mall as the assistant manager of a portrait studio. After coming out as gay, he couldnât go home, and then the family lost their house to foreclosure so âthere wasnât a home to go back to,â he said. Many nights, heâd crash on friendsâ couches, but in the week leading up to payday, he couldnât afford the gas to get there from work. Feeling hopeless, Muñoz would find a parking spot near the mall and spend the night in his car, dealing with the exact same stressors Rosales would endure years later. In the morning, heâd take a sponge bath in the oversize sink that the studio used to develop film. His No. 1 concern, after survival, he says, was keeping anyone from finding out about his homelessness, especially on campus.
President Muñoz â who is warm like Rosales yet more self-contained, often listening so intently as to become motionless â said the Safe Parking Program is about more than providing physical safety for students who sleep in their vehicles. Muñoz wants these students to feel safe bringing their full selves to college, in a way he didnât until transferring to a four-year school and moving into student housing. âThe mental load that I was carrying, I was able to set that down,â he said, âand I was able to then really focus that energyâ â on classes, on who he wanted to be. Thatâs Muñozâs answer to those who say emergency housing is a distraction, ancillary to the mission of a college.
Indeed, research suggests that asking a student to thrive in college without a reliable place to sleep is no more reasonable than asking them to ace a test without access to books or lectures. studies that housing insecurity is associated with significantly lower grades and well-being. Lacking a stable housing arrangement has also to negatively affect class attendance, and the odds of getting a degree. Whatâs more, a found that housing-insecure students rely more on risky credit services like payday loans and auto-title loans. This Gordian knot of need and peril, which often also includes child care obligations and food insecurity, makes it that emergency housing alone will improve studentsâ lives. But Rashida Crutchfield, a professor of social work and executive director of the Center for Equitable Higher Education at California State University, Long Beach, said, âItâs one of those âobviouslyâ moments that if you house students, they do better.â
When a pandemic-era survey revealed at least 70 LBCC students were living in their cars, Muñoz asked the collegeâs board to support him in implementing a . They agreed something had to be done, but issues like legal liability concerned some LBCC staff. Additional worries included the cost and that it would mean less money for longer-term solutions, the risk of sending a message that itâs OK for students to have to sleep in their cars, and âthe sky is falling kind of stuffâ â visions of drugs, sex, trash, urine. But Muñoz pressed, and in 2021 the school piloted a program with 13 students and a startup budget of $200,000 from . That money covered private overnight security and paid for the nonprofit Safe Parking LA to train LBCC staff and help develop an application, liability waiver and more. The schoolâs facilities team installed security cameras, scheduled more cleaning and figured out how best to handle the extra opening and closing of the lotâs gates.
Similar efforts sprang up during the pandemic but later shuttered. For example, in Oakland between Laney College and West Side Missionary Baptist Church wound down the safe lot program near the University of Washingtonâs Seattle campus. âThe funding isnât there anymore,â explained Marguerita Lightfoot, a professor at OHSU-PSU School of Public Health. Yet still to this day, she said of sleeping in cars, âThere are students who are doing that at every institution.â
Knowing that, LBCC was determined to keep the Safe Parking Program running even after the federal tap ran dry. The school moved the program from its original location to the lot Rosales would call home, which has a clear line of sight from the campus security office. One extra campus security position replaced the private company, cutting LBCCâs overall spend in half. In other words, Muñoz made it work.
Other schools have swung different hammers at the same nail. Some colleges and universities with dorms maintain âin-and-out rooms,â beds set aside for short-term, emergency use, the way in Chicago and Fort Lewis College in Colorado do. But Sitjar says a lot of red tape and considerable expense make in-and-out rooms uncommon. For specific student populations, some schools offer year-round housing, like West Chester Universityâs for and qualifying students without housing and a at San Diego State University. But âduring the summer, itâs really, really, really hard for institutions to try to keep those rooms set aside,â Sitjar said, since they otherwise generate revenue via summer camps, reunions and more, and during the academic year mean room-and-board money.
And community colleges â which educate the majority of American college students â dorms that allow for this option. A few have teamed up with four-year institutions to house students at a discounted rate. In New Jersey, Rider University students from Mercer County Community College. Through a launched in 2019, Massachusetts reimburses four-year campuses for the cost of keeping dorm beds available for community college students experiencing homelessness. A review of the program, through which eight colleges and universities have hosted students, found that 72% of participants showed academic improvement and even more experienced improved mental health.
Other types of partnerships also put roofs over studentsâ heads in short order. Cape Cod Community College works with to get students into hotel rooms on days the temperature falls below 32 degrees. And Norco College in Southern California is just one of dozens that directly with a hotel. Religious organizations help too, such as Depaul USA , which houses college students experiencing homelessness in a converted convent. Around 400 miles south, in Wake County, North Carolina, is a nonprofit that began with members of the NC State University community inviting students to move into their homes. And New York Cityâs LaGuardia Community College Airbnb to house students short term, with the company reimbursing hosts.
A particularly unusual partnership resulted when Winona Health, a health care system in Minnesota, acquired a nursing home that had a mansion sitting on the same parcel of land. The century-old building, Watkins Manor, wasnât ideal for assisted living, so in 2021 Winona from nearby colleges to move in for a very low monthly rent plus volunteer hours. Students help senior citizens do things like troubleshoot tech, go shopping and participate in therapeutic recreation programs. âThe residents love it, the students love it,â said Linda Atkinson, the administrator who oversees the program. While students donât need to experience housing insecurity to apply, the program has provided emergency housing for those who have been kicked out of a parentâs home, experienced domestic violence and more.
Some schools combine these solutions, inching toward more comprehensive support. At California State University, Sacramento, the maintains four beds in on-campus dorms for immediate use. It also partners with the Hampton Inn and offers rent subsidies, eviction-avoidance grants (a utility bill here, a late fee there) and move-in support grants (think security deposits), . Additionally, the program has helped connect students with members of local churches willing to open their homes. Understanding that some students donât have cars, LBCC too offers much more than the Safe Parking Program. As Crutchfield put it, âDifferent people have lots of different needs, and we have to have a buffet of options.â
At Howard Community College in Maryland, one smörgĂ„sbord item is a place to nap. President Daria Willis doesnât have anywhere to put a shelter for housing-insecure students, as , and the have done. âWe are pretty much landlocked,â she explained, âIâve got a hospital on my left side, and Iâve got neighborhoods on the right, back, and front side of the campus.â But she wanted to do something to help the exhausted students she walked by on the way to her office morning after morning. Students who worked night shifts, parented young kids or didnât have a place to sleep at night were curled into chairs and draped over benches. In a pilot program, the school bought five chairs, known as sleeping pods, designed for rest. After Willis on social media of herself relaxing in one, âit exploded,â she said: âStudents were in them every single moment of the day,â often needing to be asked to leave when buildings closed at 11:30 p.m. So the school bought more sleeping pods. And more again.
No one, though, believes napping facilities and parking lots are really the answer.
Rosales has leg issues and a bad back. âIâm a big guy,â he said as he folded himself into the back seat of his car in an origami-like series of steps in early September. The WiFi on the lot is spotty, one bathroom for more than a dozen people often means a line, thereâs no fridge to store leftovers or microwave to reheat them, and Safe Parking Program users arenât able to sleep in or get to bed early. Last semester, when he took a class that didnât get out until 10 p.m., Rosales had to move as fast as his busted knees would carry him to make the cutoff at 10:30. And he was still homeless. Heâd go to a restaurant, spending dollars he couldnât spare and eating too much just âto feel like a normal person,â Rosales said. Heâd say hello to everybody and strike up a conversation with his server, to try to âbe normal for a minute.â
Yet despite its limitations, the Safe Parking Program let Rosales âbreathe, relax, continue on,â he said. And the lot offered a chance to build community. He began encouraging new arrivals to connect: âTrust me, weâll help you,â Rosales would say. And they do often require help like that. Even when campus resources exist, two-thirds of students in need lack awareness about available supports, the Hope Center researchers concluded. Stigma is part of the problem. As Rosales put it, âWeâre scared that weâre going to get judged or someoneâs going to give us pity or give us a look ⊠like, âOh, there goes the homeless one.ââ He didnât even tell his family about his homelessness. In fact, Rosalesâ peer navigator was the first to know â and he only had one of those to turn to because of LBCCâs surveys and targeted outreach.
Recently, Rosales organized a free breakfast to connect his âroommates and neighborsâ with campus resources and each other. He felt terrible that he still couldnât do much for the son heâd barely seen since moving out, especially after being laid off by the trucking company on Christmas Eve. But gathering participants in the Safe Parking Program, helping them â now he could add value to someone. And he felt valued by LBCC, having been given comprehensive support and case management meant to find an on-ramp to stable housing, as well as money for car repairs. (Each year, between $23,000 and $115,000 from the LBCC Foundation â which swelled after a from MacKenzie Scott, the philanthropist formerly married to Jeff Bezos â goes to students for vehicle registration, insurance, repairs and daytime parking permits.) Rosales felt like he at LBCC, even after bringing his whole self to campus, just as Muñoz had hoped.
At some point in the nationâs history, homelessness on college campuses was nonexistent, a rounding error when it did occur, because students had to have wealth behind them to access higher education. As efforts to democratize admissions and attendance (like the GI Bill) have borne fruit, âmore of those who are facing these issues are getting to institutions,â said Abelson, the Hope Centerâs senior director of education and training, combining with housing and funding shortages to create that âhas largely gone under the radar and unrecognized.â Efforts to equalize opportunity have been insufficient, and yet, theyâve made it possible for someone like Muñoz to graduate and then rise through the ranks. Theyâve made it possible for his days of rationing gas and sink-bathing to open an institutionâs eyes to the need for a net to catch students who are slipping off its ivory tower, and for Muñoz to push to create one, even if it must be stitched together from imperfect materials.
But the reality is that the majority of schools have massive holes in their nets, or to return to Crutchfieldâs metaphor, they donât offer any of these emergency housing dishes, let alone the whole spread. For the most part, colleges and universities still just create a list of resources and refer students out, suggesting they try their luck with local shelters and Craigslist. Itâs inadequate. âOur shelter systems are overtaxed,â Crutchfield said, âthereâs just not enough capacity.â And even when there is, âstudents donât see shelter systems as for them,â she said. In some ways, theyâre right: Shelter rules, including the need to queue up and turn lights off when thereâs homework still to be done, often clash with studentsâ needs.
âIf I fall down and Iâm bleeding, definitely get me medical attention, get me a Band-Aid,â Crutchfield said. âBut if the road is broken, and thatâs why people keep falling down, you have to deal with the road.â So yes to safe parking, she said, but also, âWhat are we going to do next?â
In addition to , participating in rapid rehousing models and advocating for financial aid that covers the true cost of college, some schools have hired homeless liaisons, staff members dedicated to assisting students experiencing homelessness. SchoolHouse Connection, California, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland and Tennessee require schools to establish these roles. Maine encourages doing so, and California, Minnesota and Washington even that can be used to pay for them. The impact appears to be significant. In Washington, 22 out of 25 community colleges surveyed they provide some sort of emergency housing. Sitjar said, âFor institutions and states that have these individuals, that have these roles, weâre then seeing those colleges make the really unique solutions of addressing housing.â
She pointed to bipartisan legislation, two bills that are expected to be reintroduced this session, as well as force colleges to develop plans for housing during academic breaks, do a better job of identifying students struggling with homelessness and more. One of the bills would update the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program to allow full-time students to live in LIHTC housing if theyâve experienced homelessness within the last seven years. Abelson said the Hope Center support this reform as well as similar efforts aimed at âreducing the many barriers that students face to accessing [government] benefits.â
These days, Rosales still eats his feelings sometimes, he said, but âitâs slowly getting better because I see a therapist every two weeks through the school.â When LBCC told him in September that heâd been offered housing through called Jovenes â a two-bedroom, two-bath to be shared with three roommates â Rosales began to cry, from relief but also from fear. âI never thought I was going to get out of here,â he said of the Safe Parking Program. âThis is my home, this is where I live, this is where Iâve been â holidays, weekends, a birthday.â He finds comfort in knowing that the lot is always an option, as it is for the dozens of LBCC students living on the brink who have signed up for the program just in case. But he doesnât sleep there anymore. âIâm not going back,â Rosales said, and for the first time, he believes in his ability to make that happen. He can feel in his truck-weary bones that heâll graduate, that heâll get that house heâs been dreaming about: âIâm moving ahead.â
was produced by and reviewed and distributed by Âé¶čÔŽŽ.