Multiple residents used the public comment period to press the City and County of Denver for faster, better-coordinated help for people without stable housing.
Speakers described a range of experiences: HGG said the city faces "an epidemic Of an house families in Denver," noting a family with a 1-month-old child sleeping outdoors and warning that the crisis is worsening. Rodney Gonzalez recounted an eviction from a home on Nome Street, months of sleeping in his car and difficulty getting timely help from a resource center; he asked the council to "improve service center responsiveness" rather than rely on giveaways. Victor Maras urged the council to avoid targeting organizations that serve houseless populations and said public criticism of such groups harms the very people they are meant to help.
The comments flagged specific service gaps. Brian O'Shea described enrolling in a city safe-parking program through the Saint Francis Center and then having his vehicle towed on Thanksgiving without prior warning; he said he was working with District 10 staff and the mayor's office to recover his property. Several speakers said shelter and outreach capacity remain insufficient as cold weather arrives.
No council responses or votes occurred during the comment period. Speakers asked council members and staff to follow up; Brian O'Shea said he had been in contact with District 10 and that staff there were "receptive." The session closed without formal direction recorded in the public comment time.