Mayor de Blasio Announces Plan That Will End Long-Term Street Homelessness in New York City

December 17, 2019Historic,  first-in-the-nation plan triples down on successful street outreach strategies  and adds more new housing, new health and mental health services and  interagency coordination NEW  YORK—The  de Blasio Administration today announced its first-in-the nation, 6- Point  Action Plan to end long-term street homelessness in New York City over the next  five years. The plan will increase housing, mental health and medical services  for unsheltered individuals, and enhance outreach resources to deliver more urgent  and rapid responses to unsheltered individuals in need.“Homeless  New Yorkers are just like us—they deserve our love and compassion and a  commitment to go as far as we can to help,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.  “So here’s our promise: we will help every last person experiencing long-term  homelessness off our streets and we will do more than we ever thought possible  to bring them home.”Current  strategies have helped more than 2,450 individuals off the streets and  into transitional and permanent settings since the launch of HOME-STAT in April  2016.By  marshaling new and critical resources, the first-in-the-nation six-point Action Plan, unveiled today will:Increase Safe Haven capacity by opening 1,000 new Safe Haven beds Create 1,000 new low-barrier permanent apartments by working with partners  across the housing and social services sectors Deliver new health resources to people where they are, providing treatment through  street medical care and behavioral health care, and build the trust needed for  clients to come inside Provide coordinated rapid outreach response through the Street Homelessness  Joint Command Center Leverage state-of-the-art ou treach  technology to better connect clients to the services they need to transition  into housing  Expand Diversion and Outreach in our subway systemCreate  Paths to Permanency Through New Housing ResourcesThrough  this Action Plan, the City will expand the number of beds designed to support  New Yorkers who’ve lived on the streets with specialized services. These 1,000  new ‘safe haven’ and ‘stabilization’ will increase the total number of beds  dedicated to serving street homeless individuals by 64 percent citywide to  2,800. Today, there are approximately 1,800 such beds available across the five  boroughs—triple the number available in 2014.To  address urgent housing needs, the City will also create 1,000 permanent housing  units for New Yorkers experiencing street homelessness, working in  collaboration with housing and social services nonprofit providers. In  partnership with HPD, the City will work to identify privately-owned properties  throughout the City with a large share of vacancies that can be converted into  safe, secure permanent housing. These new units could be immediately occupied  by eligible households, including some who are formerly unsheltered  individuals.The plan will also improve access to rental assistance for  unsheltered individuals, and make it clear that a shelter stay is not a  requirement for unsheltered individuals working with outreach teams to qualify  for rental assistance. For unsheltered individuals who do choose to utilize  rental assistance, the City will work to expedite rehousing placements.  Additionally, the NYC Human Resources Administration (HRA) will enhance the  supportive housing placement process, including through the launch of a new  eligibility and tracking database system during 2020.Provide  Coordinated Medical and Behavioral Health CareTo  strengthen the provision of medical and behavioral health care directly to  unsheltered New Yorkers where they are, the City will expand the Street  Medicine approach developed by HOME-STAT outreach providers to all five  boroughs, delivering rapid response care on the streets and in the subways with  services such as: risk assessments, wound care, referrals to medical and mental  health providers, medication assistance, administration of antibiotics and  blood pressure and diabetes screening. Currently, the Street Medicine program  operates in Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn and Queens.The  City will also work across Agencies, bringing all relevant experience and  expertise to the table, to ensure unsheltered New Yorkers with the most serious  mental health challenges are closely connected to care, referred to care  coordination, and/or engaged by mobile treatment teams, which provide  psychosocial and psychiatric assessment, medication management, care  coordination, peer support, and housing placement assistance to people where  they are. Additionally, teams offer specialized treatment interventions for  trauma and substance use, taking a harm reduction approach.NYC  Health + Hospitals participates in interagency coordination meetings to ensure  smooth transition between homeless outreach, removal to the hospital for  emergency services, and discharge back to the community. Further, there will be  hospital coordination with DHS to improve discharge planning for patients  returning to shelter. The NYC Health + Hospital Central Office will coordinate  with city agency partners, outreach teams, and hospitals to ensure ongoing  communication.ICYMI:  Status Updates on City’s New ApproachesStreet  Homelessness Joint Command Center–DHS  and NYPD lead a 24/7/365 Street Homelessness Joint Command Center that conducts  interagency rapid outreach deployment from a central location using precision  mapping, client information, and rapid response to incoming notifications.To  address the most challenging cases of unsheltered homelessness involving  high-needs clients—who often face the most significant, overlapping needs,  including mental health and substance misuse—the Joint Command Center also  develops tailored interventions on a case-by-case basis to work towards a  breakthrough to encourage these individuals to finally accept services and  transition off the streets and out of the subways. Individual plans are created  in close collaboration with partners including DOHMH, H+H, FDNY Emergency  Medical Services, and contracted outreach providers  Diversion– The Subway Diversion Project is a citywide  initiative reforming Police Officers’ approach to engaging and offering  services to unsheltered New Yorkers underground, with a focus on diverting  individuals from the criminal justice system towards outreach services and  supportive programs.  Participants who opt into the program complete an  assessment with an outreach team, receive a referral to shelter and/or other  services, and have their summonses cleared, ultimately diverting them towards  shelter away from unnecessary formal court processes and helping more people  come inside and out of the subways. The City is expanding the program across  Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx and QueensUnprecedented  Investments Show Progress – Since 2014, the City has redoubled outreach  efforts, dedicating unprecedented new resources to street outreach  programs and providers:Quintupling the City’s investment in street
homeless programs, increasing from approximately $45M in 2013 to more than
$240MTripling the number of outreach staff canvassing the
streets engaging New Yorkers 24/7/365 since 2014, from fewer than 200 to more than 550, with those
dedicated staff canvassing the streets every day, building relationships
over weeks and months through regular contact and concerted engagement
with homeless New Yorkers focused on encouraging them to accept services
and transition off the streets. More than quadrupling the number of emergency ‘safe
haven’ and ‘stabilization’ beds dedicated to serving street homeless New
Yorkers citywide since 2014, with
hundreds of beds opened during this Administration, bringing the total up
from 600 to more than 1,800 today, and hundreds more set to open in the
coming years. Today’s announcement of 1,000 new beds will ultimately
increase the citywide total by 654 percent, to approximately 2,800 beds
dedicated to serving street homeless individuals and available to
HOME-STAT outreach teams in their citywide outreach efforts. Building the City’s first-ever by-name list of
individuals known to be homeless and residing on the streets to
improve delivery of services,
with outreach teams now knowing approximately 1,300 street homeless individuals
by name and actively engaging another 2,400 individuals encountered on the
streets to determine whether they are homeless. Increasing joint outreach operations to engage more New Yorkers and offer more supports,
including expanding joint outreach operations with partner Agencies such
as DOHMH, Parks Department, Department of Sanitation, NYPD, and the MTA to
address conditions as they occur and provide alternative pathways to
permanence.  “The  de Blasio administration is rising to meet the moral challenge of street  homelessness with a bold plan the likes of which our country has never seen,”  said Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Dr. Raul Perea-Henze.  “This action plan to end long-term street homelessness is rooted in lessons we  have learned about the power of persistent outreach and coordinated care for  the whole person wherever they are in their journey. We call on all New Yorkers  to help us bring family members, friends and neighbors back home from the  streets.”“In  2017, we announced Turning the Tide, the most comprehensive plan to address  sheltered and unsheltered homelessness in the nation. Today, in partnership  with our City Agency colleagues, faith leaders, and compassionate New Yorkers  across the five boroughs, we are going deeper and tripling down on a key  component of that plan: our efforts to address unsheltered homelessness.  Building on the lessons we’ve learned and successes we’ve achieved over the  past there years in bringing more than 2,450 people off the streets and out of  the subways, we’re now prepared to go further, dedicating an unprecedented  amount of housing resources and social services to individuals experiencing  long-term unsheltered homelessness,” said Department of Social Services  Commissioner Steven Banks. “With 1,000 new Safe Haven beds, 1,000 new  low-barrier permanent housing apartments, expanded evidence-based healthcare  care models, enhanced technology, and strengthened collaboration with Agency  partners, all of which will help our HOME-STAT teams further target their  outreach and meet people where they are, we are confident we can find pathways  to stability for all New Yorkers experiencing long-term unsheltered  homelessness and end this crisis that too many experience in our City.”“Homelessness  takes a toll on people’s health in so many ways, including making it more  difficult to manage conditions like diabetes, mental illness and HIV,” said Health  Commissioner Dr. Oxiris Barbot. “Bringing services to the street, and  people into homes, will improve New Yorkers’ lives and make our City a  healthier place.”“As  the leading provider of behavioral health services in the city, NYC Health +  Hospitals is committed to providing the best care for its patients at our  facilities and through the coordination of other city agencies such as the  Department of Homeless Services and the street outreach teams,” said Mitchell  Katz, MD, President and CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals. “This coordinated  approach will ensure that our patients receive the care they need, and that our  health care providers have the best information on hand at intake.”“Improving  public safety and helping unsheltered New Yorkers requires a comprehensive,  multi-agency response,” said NYPD Chief of Transit Edward Delatorre.  “Taken together, our efforts reinforce the NYPD’s core philosophy of  Neighborhood Policing by connecting some of the most vulnerable New Yorkers  with the services they need.”“This  Administration has made historic investments to support New Yorkers who have  fallen through every social safety net—tripling the number of outreach staff,  tripling the number of dedicated beds for New Yorkers experiencing unsheltered  homelessness, and helping more than 2,450 of those New Yorkers into safe,  stable housing,” said Department of Homeless Services Administrator Joslyn  Carter. "Today’s Six Point Action Plan will help us accelerate our  progress and achieve goals by expanding the tools available to HOME-STAT  outreach teams in their efforts to engage and encourage New Yorkers in need to  accept services. As HOME-STAT outreach teams work around the clock to build  trust with each and every individual in need, we know that every New Yorker who  accepts services and comes indoors represents an individual victory and life  changed for the better.”"In  a city where a billionaire can afford a $240 million penthouse, no one should  be forced to sleep on the street,” said State Senator Brad Hoylman. “New  York City is in the midst of a housing affordability crisis, which is why I was  proud to help pass historic tenant reforms in the New York State Senate. For  those who still cannot afford housing, we have a responsibility as a city to  provide care and resources. That""s why I""m pleased to see Mayor de Blasio  releasing a 6-point Action Plan to end long-term street homelessness."“Over  the past decade we’ve all witnessed the devastating reality of increasing  homelessness across New York City, and the cyclical effects of systemic  disadvantages for struggling communities and individual,” said State Senator Luis Sepúlveda. “The Bronx and all of NYC have been hit hard with the  homelessness crisis, so I commend the Mayor and his team for their innovative  efforts to invest in our communities by providing more holistic services to  people facing housing insecurity and other inter-related challenges.  Investments in housing and mental health for those in need can result in  sustainable benefits for all.”"Delivering  permanent housing is the key to ending homelessness in NYC, and this plan aims  to achieve exactly that," said Council Finance Chair Daniel Dromm.  "Housing insecurity is a stark reality for many New Yorkers. I am pleased  that the administration is taking it head on by, among other efforts,  increasing homeless outreach resources and employing the latest technology to  ensure that all NYC residents are contacted. While there is still much work  ahead of us, this 6-Point Action Plan represents a significant step forward in  the fight to end the housing crisis.""To  get palpable progress fighting our City""s current homelessness crisis, it""s  going to take a bold and innovative plan," said Council Member Ben  Kallos. "Although we all wish we could end homelessness right now, a  five-year plan that doubles down on some of the strategies that have been  working paired with new ideas and new efforts will make an impact at decreasing  the number of long-term homeless men and women on our streets. I commend Mayor  de Blasio for recommitting our City""s resources and efforts to this  cause." "I  applaud the administration""s commitment to new housing resources for street  homeless New Yorkers. We know that the homelessness crisis is a crisis of  housing and we need much deeper investment in permanent housing options and  safe havens," said Council General Welfare Chair Stephen Levin.  "The addition of 1,000 new Safe Haven beds and 1,000 new low-barrier  permanent apartments will make a real difference in the lives of our  unsheltered neighbors looking to get back on their feet. I look forward to  working with the administration along with housing and nonprofit providers to  connect unsheltered New Yorkers to the support and housing resources they  deserve."“The  city has a responsibility to shelter individuals and to work collectively to ensure  all New Yorkers have a place to stay where they feel safe and welcome. I thank  the Mayor for offering solutions to address street homelessness, said Council Member Keith Powers“No  New Yorker should ever be without access to safe, quality housing,” said Council  Member Antonio Reynoso. “New York City must do more to tackle our mounting  homelessness crisis. The de Blasio Administration’s new 6-Point Action Plan is  a promising sign that New York City is on the right path towards offering  shelter and resources to those who currently do not have a place to call home  while working to address the root causes of homelessness. I will continue to  advocate for more permanent, deeply affordable housing and support services for  our neediest populations.”“Increasing  the availability of safe spaces for street homeless individuals is a critical  need for the thousands of people sleeping on the streets each night,” said Council  Member Rafael Salamanca. “I am pleased to see that the administration is  taking the initiative under the six-point action plan to increase the number of  safe haven beds and permanent housing for the homeless. Along with the  implementation of an increase in homeless set asides in new residential  development, I look forward to working with the administration to ensure that  the city’s most vulnerable receive the appropriate shelter they deserve.’"Though  the monstrous crisis of chronic homelessness seems to defy every effort to tame  it; the mayor must be commended for his consistency in implementing initiatives  to confronting this crisis that impact the lives of New Yorkers on all levels  of life. This latest initiative is another clear expression of the mayor""s  commitment,” said Bishop Earl McKay, The Bronx Church of God of Prophecy."I  support the Mayor""s plan, with every confidence that the  locations of  borough-based facilities will be equitably placed, reflective of community  input and  concerns of overly-saturated neighborhoods, and  necessary  investments in and for the residents of impacted areas,” said Rev. Dr Fred  Lucas, Senior Pastor, Brooklyn Community Church.“As  a Christian, I believe this initiative is one of Mayor de Blasio""s that is in  line with the Christian ethic of caring for the  least of these" the  oftentimes forgotten,” said Pastor Abraham Jules, MDiv, The Community  Worship Center.“It  is a credit to the Mayor who continue to address the Homelessness in our city.  This overwhelming issue needs leadership and the support of our community.  Congratulations,” said  Rev. Clive Neal MDiv, Bedford Central  Presbyterian."I  am grateful for this step towards addressing a critical need for the men, women  and children who are without permanent shelter; yet my hope is that we consider  this as one of many responses to a humanitarian crisis that God is calling us  to resolve so that God""s people are prioritized over personal profits,"  said Rev. Brian Ellis Gibbs, Queens Baptist Church."A  society that does not make room for all its members cannot claimed itself as  advance, sophisticated or successful. We are as good as the least among us are  able survive and have a real chance to rise up and succeed,” said Pastor  Warner A. Richards, PsyD. Senior pastor Hanson Place SDA Church. Offering  shelter and safe haven to the homeless is a central ethical mandate of the  faith community. This Action Plan turns this prophetic call into public policy,  addressing in an important way the city""s homelessness crisis,” said Rabbi  Michael Feinberg, Executive Director Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition."I  applauded our Mayor and this administration addressing this problem of  homelessness that has been plaguing our city for years. Because of this new  initiative thousands of homeless individuals will be in safer and more  conducive environment,” said Rev. Dr. Phil Craig, Pastor of the Greater  Springfield Community Church and President of National Action Network, Queens  Chapter.“Anything  being done to help the "homeless" (or, as I define it, the  residentially challenged) is like music to my ears. Our city lags behind other  cities in terms of our care for which. This is just one step in the right  direction. A lot more needs to be done. I commend any and all efforts to  alleviate which. Thanks much,” said Pastor Dr. Allen K. Hand, Sr.

日期:2022/01/14点击:18