Many thanks to Cantrell’s Concrete & Affordable Heating and Cooling for sponsoring this article
The City of Murfreesboro is seeing new resources arrive to serve the unhoused population as the nonprofit organization The Journey Home prepares for its grand reopening.

The Journey Home’s executive director, Scott Foster, noted that as Murfreesboro’s overall population grows, the city’s unhoused population has increased as well. According to the United Way, 367 people in Rutherford County were experiencing homelessness during the 2024 point-in-time count.
“We do find that our needs are becoming more acute,” Foster said. “We have more people on the streets who are older, more seniors, and more individuals living with persistent mental illness or disabilities.”

After a three-year campaign, The Journey Home successfully raised $6.2 million to construct a new 20,000-square-foot community resource center. The facility features exam rooms and counseling spaces where individuals can meet with representatives from another Murfreesboro-based nonprofit, Volunteer Behavioral Health.
Volunteer Behavioral Health also works directly with local law enforcement, embedding staff members with officers during patrols.


Leave feedback about this