Chattanooga Times Free Press

Homeless in Atlanta are flocking to busy airport for shelter overnight

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ATLANTA — The world’s busiest airport increasing­ly has become a refuge for Atlanta’s homeless, especially during cold weather.

The domestic terminal is sometimes filled with homeless people overnight and into the early morning, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported.

There have periodical­ly been some homeless people at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport, a public terminal open 24 hours a day.

But after the closure of a large shelter downtown and a spate of frigid temperatur­es this winter, large numbers of homeless have been using the airport to escape the cold, the newspaper reported.

Over the past couple of months, many homeless have been taking the train to the Atlanta airport stop, settling down in the chairs or stretching out on the floor in the domestic terminal atrium, the Journal-Constituti­on reported.

Frequent traveler Patricia MartinDye arrived at the airport overnight for a recent early morning flight and saw homeless people around the atrium and in the domestic terminal.

“They were everywhere,” MartinDye said. “I’ve probably been in the airport more than 20 times in the last two years, and I can never remember it being the way it was last night. It was just really concerning to me.”

Officials were asking people to show boarding passes to prove they had a flight to catch. If not, they were told they were trespassin­g.

“As soon as they would get rid of some, here comes more,” Martin-Dye said.

Martin-Dye said she thinks the influx of homeless people at the airport “creates a stigma.”

Travelers waiting for flights “don’t want people coming up to them or sitting next to them [who don’t] smell properly or dress properly. and asking them for money,” she said. She said it was “heartbreak­ing,” especially because the temperatur­e dipped into the 30s that night and “they were not dressed adequately at all.”

“You don’t want people to see a negative, coming from all over the world, coming from different countries. Coming to America, and that’s what you see?,” she said. “That’s not anything for us to be proud of.”

Hartsfield-Jackson spokesman Reese McCranie said the airport takes “safety and security very seriously.”

“We continue to work closely with our partners to assist those who may be experienci­ng homelessne­ss and find a longterm solution,” McCranie said. “We’re going to treat those who may be experienci­ng homelessne­ss with humanity. Certainly during the colder months we’ll show heart and compassion.”

Police officers at the airport “stand ready to address any criminal activity, regardless of the source,” according to Atlanta police spokesman Carlos Campos. “They are also committed to helping any individual experienci­ng homelessne­ss they encounter to understand the resources for assistance available to them.”

The City of Atlanta opens warming centers when the temperatur­e drops.

However, city officials “cannot force anyone to take shelter in one of our emergency warming facilities,” according to Jenna Garland, a spokeswoma­n for Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms. “The City believes individual­s experienci­ng homelessne­ss should be treated with dignity and offered the resources and support to transition out of homelessne­ss.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Passengers line up to go through a security checkpoint in the atrium of the domestic passenger terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport on March 10.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Passengers line up to go through a security checkpoint in the atrium of the domestic passenger terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport on March 10.

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