Chattanooga Times Free Press

Advocates want more help from DeKalb County warming centers

- BY TYLER ESTEP

Local advocates are pushing DeKalb County to do more with the warming centers that are offered to protect vulnerable residents during frigid weather.

County officials, meanwhile, say the centers are only part of the puzzle — and they’re doing plenty more to address homelessne­ss in the community.

Representa­tives from groups like the Coalition for A Diverse DeKalb, the Beacon Hill Black Alliance for Human Rights, the Justice for All Coalition, and A Home for Everyone in DeKalb planned to hold a press conference to discuss the issue Friday morning.

They say the three fire stations DeKalb has offered as warming centers on select evenings aren’t enough, and that more advance notice of their availabili­ty needs to be provided. Transporta­tion plans and wraparound support services should also be provided for those in need, advocates said.

“DeKalb County needs to offer more warming center services for the unhoused that rival Gwinnett County: a hot meal, shower, overnight stay and services to help our residents get back on their feet,” Beacon Hill co-chair Phil Cuffey said in a news release.

The release called DeKalb’s current offerings “wholly inadequate to meet the needs of our most vulnerable residents.”

DeKalb community developmen­t director Allen Mitchell, meanwhile, said Tuesday that a total of nine people had come to warming centers during the four recent nights they’d been open.

He said those that do come are interviewe­d to see if they qualify for further assistance through the county’s coordinate­d entry program. Those larger efforts to address homelessne­ss mean there’s not a demand for the warming stations “to the extent you might anticipate,” Mitchell said.

He said that, in the 12 months ending last September, more than 3,000 individual­s were helped through things like emergency shelters and the county’s rapid re-housing program. More than 150 people were currently being housed in hotel or motel rooms paid for by the county.

“The county is currently housing more than 150 homeless citizens in transition­al housing,” the county said in an emailed statement provided to the AJC. “The accommodat­ions include meals twice a day, case management and security. The county’s homelessne­ss efforts are a top priority and include multiple county department­s including public safety and community developmen­t.”

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