ABSTRACT
Using in-depth face-to-face interviews, this study explored 34 homeless shelter workers’ perceptions of homelessness and working with the homeless. We asked the following questions: 1) What were the barriers that homeless shelter residents faced in combating homelessness, from the perspective of the homeless shelter workers? 2) What were the challenges that homeless shelter workers encountered in working with this at-risk population? Our findings shared the realities that the homeless population faced from the lens of shelter workers with different job responsibilities (ranging from customer service workers to case managers, program directors/coordinators, and shelter administrators). Overall, we found that working with the homeless community could present a challenge for shelter workers given the limited availability of funding, discrepancies in agreement of solutions, the lack of qualified helping professionals, the limits of service coordination, preconceived judgment/prejudice from the public, and a series of obstacles that the homeless population faces including barriers to accessing services, employability, personal hardship, and social stigma.
Note
Both second and third authors of this article were former social work students at the University of Texas at El Paso.
Acknowledgment
The authors thanked the participants for their contribution to this study.
Data availability statement:
Due to the sensitive nature of this research, data from this research are not made available for the public.
Notes
1 A total of 36 interviews were conducted but two were excluded from the study due to administrative errors from the research team.
2 One participant did not disclose her age.