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   alt.politics.economics      "Its the economy, stupid"      345,379 messages   

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   Message 344,042 of 345,379   
   davidp to All   
   =?UTF-8?Q?What_Happens_When_New_York=E2=   
   07 Aug 23 22:44:24   
   
   From: lessgovt@gmail.com   
      
   What Happens When New York’s Shelters Run Out of Room?   
   By Nicole Hong, Aug. 3, 2023, NY Times   
   The crowds outside the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan this week would   
   have been familiar in any number of American cities struggling to contain a   
   crisis of homelessness: dozens of people languishing on sidewalks, camping out   
   on flattened cardboard    
   boxes day and night.   
      
   But for New York City, the scene — made up of migrants waiting for beds in   
   the city’s overburdened shelter system — was unusual. And it raised a   
   difficult question: Will this become a new normal?   
      
   New York has avoided the kinds of widespread encampments that are more common   
   in cities on the West Coast, largely because of a unique legal agreement that   
   requires the city to provide a bed for anyone who requests one. No other major   
   city in America has    
   a similar mandate, known as a “right to shelter.”   
      
   But what happens when a city that is obligated to provide shelter for everyone   
   runs out of shelter?   
      
   This week, Mayor Eric Adams declared, in dire terms, that there was no more   
   room left for migrants. His administration was coming up with a plan, Mr.   
   Adams said, so that “we don’t have what’s in other municipalities where   
   you have tent cities all    
   over the city,” evoking images of homeless camps in places like San   
   Francisco and Seattle on the streets of New York.   
      
   “We need help,” Mr. Adams said. “And it’s not going to get any   
   better.”   
      
   Already, New York is home to thousands of people who are considered   
   “unsheltered,” meaning they sleep on the streets or in the subways instead   
   of opting for a shelter bed. But the vast majority of New York’s homeless   
   population sleeps in shelters    
    in stark contrast to cities like Los Angeles. New York’s harsher winters   
   also make large-scale outdoor encampments less feasible than on the West Coast.   
      
   “Tent cities are on the rise around the country because of an extreme and   
   growing lack of affordable housing,” said Maria Foscarinis, founder of the   
   National Homelessness Law Center, a nonprofit. “The reason they are not as   
   prevalent in New York is    
   the city’s legal right to shelter.”   
      
   That legal requirement should theoretically continue to keep New York’s   
   homeless people sheltered, and city officials say there are other sites   
   available to use, including ones that require federal approval. But the city   
   is now struggling under the    
   weight of nearly 100,000 migrants who have arrived since last year. More than   
   56,000 migrants still remain in the New York City’s shelters. And the pace   
   has not slowed. Last week alone, 2,300 new migrants arrived.   
      
   New York City has opened 194 sites to house the newcomers in any usable   
   facilities it could find — including hotel ballrooms, parking lots, former   
   jails and an airport warehouse. The city’s homeless shelter population now   
   exceeds 100,000 people, a    
   record high.   
      
   “We are at the desperation stage,” said Mark Levine, the Manhattan borough   
   president, who has joined other city officials in pleading for more federal   
   help. “We’re going to have to make more and more difficult decisions on   
   siting facilities that    
   at this point are all going to disrupt some aspect of life here.”   
      
   During a news conference on Wednesday, Deputy Mayor Anne Williams-Isom said   
   the city has been a “guardian of the right to shelter,” but the system was   
   buckling under pressure.   
      
   In response to questions about potential sites for sheltering migrants,   
   including Randall’s Island and Central Park, she said all options were on   
   the table. “People on the one hand cannot accuse us of not having enough   
   space,” she said, “and then    
   on the other hand tell us, ‘well, you can’t go here and you can’t go   
   there.’” Some shelter sites have been delayed because of fierce opposition   
   in neighborhoods where they would be located.   
      
   The city’s legal obligation stems from a class-action lawsuit that was filed   
   in the late 1970s, which argued that a right to shelter existed under the New   
   York State Constitution.   
      
   To settle the lawsuit, the city reached an agreement in 1981 to provide   
   shelter for every homeless man who applies for it, which has since been   
   expanded to women and families with children. The agreement also laid out the   
   standards for care, including    
   bed size and staff-to-resident ratios.   
      
   Despite repeated challenges by mayoral administrations to weaken the mandate,   
   it has endured for four decades because “New Yorkers don’t want to see   
   mass homelessness,” said Joshua Goldfein, a staff attorney at the Legal Aid   
   Society, which worked    
   on the lawsuit that led to the 1981 agreement with the lawyer Robert Hayes,   
   who founded the Coalition for the Homeless.   
      
   “They don’t want to see people living in the streets with their   
   children,” he said.   
      
   In West Coast cities that have struggled with homeless encampments, the   
   shelter infrastructure is much more limited than in New York, according to   
   Dennis Culhane, a professor of social policy at the University of Pennsylvania.   
      
   In May, the Adams administration asked a New York court to relieve it from   
   some obligations under the right-to-shelter agreement. The court proceeding is   
   still ongoing.   
      
   This week, Legal Aid and the Coalition for the Homeless, which monitors   
   conditions in shelters, said that if asylum seekers continue to be stuck   
   without beds, “we will have no choice but to file litigation to enforce the   
   law.”   
      
   For now, New York is taking steps to try and deter migrants from coming,   
   including by distributing fliers at the southern border telling them that they   
   will not be guaranteed services if they come to the city.   
      
   Advocates for migrants and homeless populations have argued that the Adams   
   administration could be doing more to free up shelter space by expanding   
   eligibility for housing vouchers and increasing staff to manage the logistics   
   of helping migrants move on.    
   Some migrants who want to move out of New York are unable to because of delays   
   in securing their driver’s license, lawyers say.   
      
   The city has repeatedly urged the Biden administration to provide more aid and   
   to expedite the federal process for migrants to legally work. On Wednesday,   
   the city also announced a partnership with several universities to recruit   
   student volunteers to    
   help migrants fill out asylum applications.   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
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