Surging housing costs, a shortage of affordable rental units, and the ongoing opioid crisis reportedly are factors leading to a record number of people who are homeless in the U.S.

The number of homeless people has jumped 11% so far this year, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. Outside of an artificially high total last year following an interruption in counting caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the next-highest increase since the U.S. government started tracking comparable numbers in 2007 was 2.7% in 2019.

High housing costs are taking the heaviest toll, the Journal reported, following the end of pandemic-era policies such as financial aid and eviction moratoriums.

“The COVID-relief funds provided a buffer,” Donald Whitehead Jr., executive director at the National Coalition for the Homeless, told the Journal. “We’re seeing what happens when those resources aren’t available.”... Read More: Newsmax