The number of unsheltered New Yorkers has rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, according to the city’s annual, one-night survey known as the HOPE count released Thursday by the Department of Social Services (DSS).

City workers found 3,439 people sleeping unhoused on the night of January 25th when they fanned across the five boroughs for the yearly count. The count occurred before Mayor Eric Adams launched his inter-agency efforts to clear the streets and subways of homeless people. Since the HOPE count happens each year during the coldest months — when many people who typically sleep on the streets seek refuge from the cold in city shelters — the number is widely understood to be an undercount. The city’s participation in the HOPE count qualifies it to apply for federal funds to help reduce homelessness.

The new count was first reported by NY1.

The count was further complicated by the fact that only city workers conducted the street survey in 2021 and 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, advocates said, instead of a larger team of additional volunteers, which is usually the case.

Despite questions about the tally’s accuracy, advocates said the surging number of people sleeping on the streets is – at least in part - an outcome of the city’s policy of closing hotels once used to provide a safer option over dormitory-style shelters to allow social distancing during the pandemic.

“We hear from our clients that this is a direct result of closing those programs and they are ending up back on the street,” said Kathleen Cash, who helps connect homeless clients with benefits and services at the Urban Justice Center’s Safety Net Project. “They've lost what they feel is a safe shelter option for them.”

Quarterly data collected by DSS appears to align with Cash’s understanding. The number of unsheltered people entering temporary housing placements soared during the pandemic to more than 2,000 people in a single quarter, a level not previously seen by the city since it began reporting the number in 2018.

That figure started to drop off in the summer of 2021, as the city began closing hotels under the Bill de Blasio administration and relying more on congregate shelters, a practice that was continued by Adams. Advocates report that many people in the city who are street homeless do not utilize dormitory shelters due to safety concerns.

During each of the first two quarters of the Adams administration, just under 1,000 people were placed in some form of temporary housing, lower than the placement levels during the height of the pandemic.

“We can’t solve what we don’t measure,” Adams said in a statement. “The HOPE count is an important tool in our ever-growing toolbox to end homelessness and help set unsheltered New Yorkers on a path to stability and permanent housing.”

At the same time the administration has closed hotel accommodations, Adams has put an emphasis on clearing homeless New Yorkers from subways and encampments.

Through the end of May, city officials had visited encampments more than 1,000 times, according to Charles Lutvak, a spokesperson for the mayor’s office, often targeting the same locations over and over again. Since mid-March, just 58 people living in encampments had gone into some form of transitional housing following a sweep. According to the mayor’s office, the city’s subway safety plan, which launched in February, resulted in more than 1,300 people being connected to some form of housing, The administration, however, did not provide information on how many of those people remained housed.

Adams has set aside $22 billion for housing over 10 years for affordable housing, including a promise to build 15,000 of the type of supportive housing apartments that homeless advocates say are necessary by 2030. Those investments will take years to come to fruition, and advocates argue the mayor should stop forcing people to abandon encampments without providing a better alternative in the near term.

“Mayor Adams must immediately halt his counterproductive, cruel sweeps that merely exacerbate trauma and push people further away from services,” said Jacquelyn Simone, policy director with Coalition for the Homeless. “[He] must instead offer all unsheltered New Yorkers the permanent affordable and supportive housing they want and need and greater access to safe, low-barrier shelters with private rooms.”

The mayor’s office did not immediately return a request for further comment.

People living on the streets account for just a fraction of the city’s homeless population. More than 60,000 New Yorkers were living in homeless shelters through April this year, according to a tally by the publication City Limits, which aggregated data from the city’s various shelter systems.