Call & Times

Mass. will use former prison to house homeless migrants

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BOSTON (AP) — Massachuse­tts Gov. Maura Healey is turning to a former prison as a temporary safety net shelter for homeless people, a surge fueled in part by an influx of migrants to the state.

The Bay State Correction­al Center will help house homeless people on the waitlist for state shelter. It was decommissi­oned in 2015 and remains in good condition, officials said. The state prison population has fallen by nearly half in less than a decade.

The facility can accommodat­e about 140 families in dorm rooms with bathrooms and showers on each floor. It also has a cafeteria, a gymnasium, a large common room, and offices that will be used for case management and administra­tive activities.

“The site will be set up with play areas for children, as well as classroom spaces for adults to engage in activities that support pathways to stability such as ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages)

classes, job training courses, and housing search workshops,” Emergency Assistance Director Scott Rice said in a statement.

Leaders in Norfolk, Massachuse­tts, where the facility is located, said in a statement Monday that they had not been consulted before the decision.

Norfolk officials said the town was informed on Friday that the former prison had been designated as temporary shelter. They said the town had no role in the decision and was no consulted ahead of time.

Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll spoke to town officials on Saturday and told them the shelter will be managed by a shelter operation named by the state Executive Office of Health and Human Services through a competitiv­e bid process.

The site should be up and running by next month, according to the state. The razor wire on the fence surroundin­g the facility will be removed and the gates will remain open so families will be free to exit and return as needed.

The shelter will house up to 450 people, officials said. The shelter is expected to operate from six months to a year, officials said.

Norfolk town officials said they plan to have regular conversati­ons with state officials to make sure the town’s concerns are heard and to work collaborat­ively on solutions in the best interests of Norfolk.

Massachuse­tts will begin limiting how long homeless people can stay in shelters as the state continues to grapple with an increase in homeless migrants.

Beginning June 1, the total length of stay will be limited to nine months, at the end of which families will be eligible for up to two 90-day extensions, under a supplement­al budget approved by state lawmakers and signed by Healey last month.

Other facilities turned into temporary shelters include a recreation­al complex in Boston.

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