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entered into the Boulder County Coordinated Entry system in 2022.Of the 409 individuals <br />entered, 11 of them were located in Louisville. <br />Exhibit 58: Homelessness by City, Boulder County, 2022 <br />Source: Boulder Countv Coordinated Entry <br />Boulder <br />186 45.4% <br />Erie <br />1 0.2% <br />Lafayette <br />18 4.4% <br />Longmont <br />172 42.1% <br />Louisville <br />11 2.7% <br />Lyons <br />5 1.2% <br />Nederland <br />12 2.9% <br />Superior <br />3 0.7% <br />Other <br />1 0.2% <br />Total <br />409 100% <br />Coordinated Entry data will certainly undercount those experiencing homelessness, as those <br />individuals reflected in the Coordinated Entry data are those that actively sought out services. <br />The Metro Denver Homeless Initiative (MDHI) publishes the annual Point -in -Time (PIT) Count. <br />In 2023, the count included 839 people in Boulder County experiencing homelessness on the <br />night of January 30, 2023. Of those 839 people, 71% were sheltered and 29% were unsheltered.15 <br />4. Marshall Fire Recovery <br />In late December 2021, the Marshall Fire destroyed 550 homes in Louisville, or roughly 6.3% of <br />the City's housing stock at the time. In addition to the many negative environmental, economic, <br />and physical and mental health impacts, the loss of housing exacerbated an already constrained <br />and expensive housing market, particularly for lower income residents. <br />15 MDHI discourages trending PIT data year -over -year due to the snapshot nature on a single night that can be <br />influenced by variables such as weather, count methods, volunteer engagement, among other factors. Therefore, <br />additional years have not been included in the HNA. <br />ECONorthwest 47 <br />54 <br />