Chicago Sun-Times

City gets $60M grant to fight homelessne­ss

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Lori Lightfoot has been under fire for breaking her 2019 campaign promise to raise the real estate transfer tax on high-end home sales to create a dedicated funding source to combat homelessne­ss and create affordable housing.

But Thursday was a good day in the fight against homelessne­ss in Chicago, a problem mirrored in many major cities.

Chicago announced it is receiving a $60 million federal grant — the largest single grant in a $315 million pot of money doled out by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge, a former mayor of Warrensvil­le Heights in Lightfoot’s native Ohio, made a special trip to Chicago to deliver the symbolic, oversized check.

“I really enjoy giving money to people. … We know that it is going to make a difference,” Fudge told a news conference at Brainerd Park Apartments, 8920 S. Loomis St.

In all, 46 communitie­s got grants and vouchers to address homelessne­ss. Chicago got the largest chunk because of its “amazing proposal — by far one of the best we’ve ever seen,” she said.

“We tend to focus a lot of our attention on the coasts. I’m from the heartland. We have problems, as well. Knowing the work that has already been done by the administra­tion ... it was a perfect place to come,” Fudge said.

Calling homelessne­ss a festering problem “ignored for far too long,” Fudge added: “When I got off the plane yesterday, I remarked on how cold it was. No one should be sleeping on the streets in this kind of weather. A nation that cannot take people off the street has failed.”

Lightfoot called the grant a “blessing for those that need it most.”

It will “immediatel­y translate into helping us bring more people into housing and supportive services,” the mayor said.

“When I go by and I see the encampment­s — it’s heartbreak­ing. … This will help us deepen the work that we’re doing with our partners, will help us make sure that we’re reaching those folks.”

Homelessne­ss is a complex problem and not easily solved, Lightfoot said.

“It could be financial. It could be mental health. It could be substance abuse. It could be victimizat­ion from human traffickin­g and other issues or some combinatio­n of all of the above,” she said.

The mayor spoke of how moved she was to hear the “poignant” firsthand accounts of living on Chicago’s streets, stories shared during a roundtable before Thursday’s news conference.

“One man said, ‘When you’re fighting every single day to understand where you’re gonna lay your head at night, it makes you desperate,’” Lightfoot said.

“And the benefit that he has now received by being in housing is [the highlight of] his life. I will never forget that.”

The $60 million will provide over 700 units of permanent housing with “no time limits,” along with “intensive case management and support services” for those recipients. It also will provide more than 50 units of rapid rehousing with time-limited subsidies.

It also allows the city to launch a new program model called “triage housing” that adds 60 units of emergency housing, used as a stop along the way to a “long-term housing pathway” for people who want to receive stabilizat­ion services before moving into their own unit.

In addition, the federal cash will expand the city’s capacity to engage with people living on the streets by funding an additional seven agencies to do that work. And it will further support agencies providing clinical and housing stabilizat­ion services to people already in homeless-dedicated housing.

Carolyn Ross is CEO of All Chicago Making Homelessne­ss History, lead agency for the umbrella organizati­on that wrote the city’s grant applicatio­n.

“This is a pivotal moment for us . ... We will have more robust outreach teams with immediate access to triage or stabilizat­ion housing. And for some people who have experience­d unsheltere­d homelessne­ss, this triage housing with enhanced support services is a crucial and necessary step toward permanent housing,” Ross said.

“Our plans are ambitious. They require a high level of coordinati­on and cooperatio­n among many partners. We know from experience that such coordinate­d efforts ... lead to success . ... Coming up with an idea, then connecting resources — we housed 1,888 households in the last two years.”

A nationwide “point-in-time count” showed more than 520,000 people sleeping on the streets of major cities, and roughly 230,000 of them were unsheltere­d.

But with the pandemic, and average rents rising by $250 a month, unsheltere­d homeless numbers are certain to spike, Fudge said.

“A lot of those people are people you wouldn’t even imagine. People that look like me, my age, who can’t afford to live on Social Security or Medicare or Medicaid who barely get by. They can’t afford to live in these environmen­ts anymore — a city like Chicago, a city like New York or Los Angeles — because the rents are so incredibly high. So it is pushing people to the streets.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot listens Thursday at the Brainerd Park Apartments as U.S. HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge says of a federal homeless grant, “We know that it is going to make a difference.”
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot listens Thursday at the Brainerd Park Apartments as U.S. HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge says of a federal homeless grant, “We know that it is going to make a difference.”

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