Thank you for the question.
The time of the audit was during the COVID period. The non-profit organizations in the homeless-serving sector were dedicated to saving the lives and protecting the health of the clients they were serving and could not provide the data at that time.
Since that time, they've started to recoup and are providing us with data and working with us on the data collection. We've done point-in-time counts with 55 communities across the country. By fall of this year, they will be completely caught up on their cycle of reporting on data, and they have already started reporting up until 2022 on the results that they achieved.
This gets back to the 5,000 projects we talked about: the 87,000 people who were prevented from becoming homeless, the 46,000 people who are placed in permanent housing, as well as a number of other supports like job training, new paid employment, education, temporary placements. Those are some of the differences that this particular program has made.
We've now been able to work with community entities. We have 60 of them across the country that we fund, and 43 of them have put coordinated access in place, where they have no wrong door for the clients they're serving. They can go to one place and they can be provided with all of the services they need. That particular community entity will find the right support for them to help their trajectory in life. That is making a big difference in communities right now.