Our blog

Understanding homelessness

Resources, insights, and stories from our work helping homeless Californians find stability and hope.

What causes homelessness in California — and what's actually working

California has the largest homeless population in the US. We break down the root causes and what evidence shows is actually making a difference.

The scale of the problem

California is home to approximately 28% of the nation's homeless population despite having only 12% of the US population. On any given night, more than 170,000 people in California experience homelessness — a number that has grown significantly over the past decade.

Understanding why requires looking honestly at the intersection of housing costs, mental health, economic inequality, and systemic gaps that leave people without a safety net.

Root causes

Housing cost and shortage: The median rent in California has outpaced median wages for decades. In many coastal cities, even full-time workers earning minimum wage cannot afford a one-bedroom apartment. When people face eviction — due to job loss, medical emergency, or domestic crisis — affordable alternatives simply don't exist.

Mental health and addiction: Roughly 30% of homeless individuals in California experience a serious mental illness, and many more struggle with substance use disorders. The state's mental health infrastructure has been underfunded for decades, leaving people without treatment options until a crisis forces hospitalization — often followed by a return to the streets.

Domestic violence: One of the most underreported paths into homelessness. Many individuals — particularly women and children — flee abusive situations with no financial resources and no immediate safe housing option.

Foster care and re-entry: Young adults aging out of foster care and individuals released from incarceration face an acute risk of homelessness. Without support systems, stable income, or housing history, they often have nowhere to go.

What's actually working

  • Housing First: The evidence-backed approach of placing people in stable housing before addressing other issues — rather than requiring sobriety or employment first — consistently shows better long-term outcomes.
  • Rapid rehousing: Short-term rental assistance combined with case management helps people quickly exit homelessness and remain housed.
  • Employment programs: Connecting people with jobs — not just housing — addresses the economic root cause. Employment is the most durable path out of homelessness.
  • Coordinated outreach: When cities, nonprofits, and service providers share data and coordinate resources, people get help faster and duplication is reduced.

At EndHomeless.us, we combine outreach, care, education, and employment into a single coordinated program.

Support our work

What you can do

Systemic change requires policy action — but individual action matters too. You can volunteer your time, donate to vetted organizations, and advocate locally for affordable housing and mental health funding. Every effort at every level adds up.

How to volunteer with homeless shelters in California's Central Valley

Looking to give your time? Here are the most impactful ways to volunteer and make a real difference for homeless individuals locally.

Why volunteering matters

Volunteers are the lifeblood of homeless services. The economic value of volunteer time is immense — but more importantly, volunteers bring skills, warmth, and human connection that cannot be replicated by funding alone.

Many homeless individuals have experienced abandonment, trauma, and isolation. A volunteer who shows up consistently — to teach a skill, share a meal, or simply listen — can be genuinely transformative.

Types of volunteer opportunities

One-time events: Food drives, clothing donation sorting, fundraising events, and community outreach days are great entry points for new volunteers. They require no long-term commitment and make an immediate impact.

Ongoing roles: Regular tutoring, job coaching, life skills instruction, and case support are higher-impact over time. If you can commit to a few hours per week or month, these roles change lives in measurable ways.

Skills-based volunteering: Do you have expertise in accounting, legal aid, marketing, web development, or healthcare? Many nonprofits — including ours — need professional skills that can be contributed remotely or on a project basis.

Corporate volunteering: Many employers have volunteer programs that match employee hours or allow paid volunteer days. Talk to your HR team about arranging a group volunteer day with our organization.

Getting started with EndHomeless.us

  • Fill out our contact form and select "Volunteer" as your reason for reaching out
  • We'll reach out within 1 business day to learn about your availability and interests
  • Complete a brief orientation (virtual or in-person) to understand our approach
  • Begin making a difference on your first shift

Ready to give your time? We'd love to have you on the team.

Get involved

What to expect

Our volunteers tell us the experience is deeply rewarding — and occasionally challenging. You may interact with people in acute crisis, people who are suspicious of help, and people whose stories are heartbreaking. We provide training and ongoing support so volunteers feel prepared and not alone. You are never expected to handle difficult situations without guidance.

How your donation to a homeless charity is actually used

We believe donors deserve to know exactly where their money goes. Here's a full breakdown of how we allocate every dollar — and what to look for in any nonprofit you support.

It's a fair question

One of the most common reasons people hesitate to donate to a charity is uncertainty about where their money actually ends up. That hesitation is completely reasonable — and it's why transparency is one of our core values at EndHomeless.us.

We are a federally recognized 501(c)(3) nonprofit (EIN: 92-1068167), founded in November 2022. Our finances are subject to IRS oversight, and we are committed to publishing our allocation clearly.

Where your donation goes

At EndHomeless.us, our target allocation is:

  • 80% to programs: Direct outreach, food and clothing, housing support, education workshops, and job placement assistance for homeless Californians.
  • 12% to operations: Nonprofit administration, accounting, compliance, and staff who coordinate programs.
  • 8% to fundraising: The cost of raising funds — website, communications, and donor outreach that sustains the whole operation.

The industry standard recognized by Charity Navigator is a program ratio of 75% or higher. We aim to exceed that benchmark.

What your specific gift buys

  • $25 — feeds one person for a week through our food assistance program
  • $50 — provides a full job training kit: interview clothing, resume printing, and skills coaching
  • $100 — covers one month of case management support for one individual
  • $250 — pays a housing security deposit, often the final barrier to stable housing
  • $500 — funds one month of shelter costs for someone in our transitional program

How to verify any nonprofit before you donate

We encourage you to do your research — on us and on any organization you're considering. Here's what to look for:

  • A valid EIN (ours is 92-1068167) — verify at irs.gov
  • A Charity Navigator or GuideStar profile
  • Publicly available IRS Form 990 (filed annually)
  • A physical address and working contact information
  • Clear, specific information about programs and impact

We meet every one of these standards. Your donation is safe, verified, and impactful.

Donate now