Baquee Sabur's life changed when he had to spend a night sleeping under a Houston overpass. "It was horrible," Sabur said. "Every car that pounces on there, you hear it. It's a dark place. You want to fall asleep, but you don't know if anyone's going to approach you. It's dirty, and you're hanging out where bugs and rats are."
![Screengrab of article header, with image showing cycle between incarceration and homelessness, via Scalawag Magazine](/sites/default/files/styles/blog_featured_image/public/articles/2023-03/screenshot-2023-03-16-14704-pm.png?itok=dkFjpU-I)