Imperial Valley Press

COVID-19 is ‘a crisis within a crisis’ for homeless people

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PHOENIX ( AP) — Nearly 200 tents stand inches apart on the scorching gravel lots, many covered in blankets for an extra layer of relief from the desert sun. Outside, their occupants sit on hot ground or in folding chairs, nearby palm trees providing no shade. Despite 12-foot-square sections painted in the gravel, there is little social distancing for Phoenix’s homeless population.

Created by local officials in late April as a temporary solution for some of the estimated 3,700 unsheltere­d homeless, the fenced-in lots on the edge of downtown promised round-theclock security, social distancing and access to water and toilets. But residents complain that hygiene supplies have become scarce, and measures meant to contain the spread of COVID-19 are not enforced.

“We have been, like, ignored,” said 61- year- old Elisheyah. “There’s no safety, nothing to guarantee you can be safe out here.”

Homeless people are one of the most vulnerable population­s in the COVID-19 pandemic, yet they’re largely invisible victims of the crisis. Very little is known about how they are faring in part because the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t -- the main federal agency overseeing homeless programs -- has not required its national network of providers to gather informatio­n on infections or deaths. That’s despite the fact that unlike other high-risk, congregate-living groups, such as nursing home residents or prisoners, homeless people interact more with the public.

At the start of the pandemic, researcher­s warned that at least 1,700 of the country’s estimated 568,000 homeless people could eventually die of COVID-19. The administra­tion’s homelessne­ss czar told Congress in July there had been just 130 homeless deaths, noting that was “significan­tly lower than had been originally projected.”

However, the Howard Center for Investigat­ive Journalism tracked at least 153 homeless deaths in the same time period in just six areas with large homeless population­s -- San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York City, Washington, D.C., Seattle and Phoenix -- and found at least 206 deaths nationwide by early August.

“This country for a long time has written off the lives of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss,” said Dr. Margot Kushel, a nationally recognized homelessne­ss expert and medical professor at the University of California, San Francisco. “And now it is literally the thing that is really going to make it very difficult to control this pandemic.”

Kushel called the pandemic “a crisis within a crisis,” noting that most homeless people are usually in poorer health and, with widespread closures, had lost access to services providing food, water and shelter.

The Howard Center spent three months investigat­ing

COVID-19’s impact on homeless people, analyzing data to predict which homeless population­s around the country would be most vulnerable. It identified 43 counties that would likely struggle in the pandemic, several of which, such as Imperial in California and Maricopa in Arizona, went on to develop some of the highest infection rates in the country. Reporters also interviewe­d more than 80 profession­als working in homelessne­ss, epidemiolo­gy and public health, as well as homeless people in hot-spot areas, who described their daily struggles. And because homelessne­ss is typically a problem left to local communitie­s to address, reporters filed 140 public records requests to the vulnerable counties and their major cities to learn more about their responses to the crisis.

Congress allocated more than $4 billion for homeless-specific programs as part of the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act and made billions more available at the discretion of federal and state officials.

But more than four months after passage of the CARES Act, the Howard Center found HUD had given communitie­s access to less than one- third of the money allocated, and even those with access to funds were still waiting on federal guidelines on how to spend the money. Cities and counties can access the funds directly or seek reimbursem­ent for approved expenditur­es after signing grant agreements with HUD.

When the money does arrive, not all of it may be used to help homeless people. Some homelessne­ss profession­als fear local government­s will direct the majority of the money to homeless prevention, helping people stay in their homes.

Ann Oliva, HUD’s former deputy assistant secretary for special needs, said it was “politicall­y and operationa­lly easier to focus on eviction prevention for people who are in housing, and who are, unfairly, often seen as more worthy of assistance than people who are experienci­ng homelessne­ss.” But, she added, “We have to do both.”

HUD did not respond to Howard Center questions about the delays, including on spending guidelines.

A patchwork response

Many have criticized the federal government for not providing a coordinate­d response to the pandemic’s impact on homeless people, as well as more resources for testing and tracing. Some have also advocated for racially equitable COVID-19 responses. By early August, people of color, who represent about 24% of the general population, comprised about 61% of all COVID-19 infections and 50% of all deaths, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We have been left county by county, city by city, to cobble together a public health response to something that is on par with the Spanish flu in terms of its infectious­ness and potential lethality,” said Marc Dones, executive director of the National Innovation Service, a public policy organizati­on focused on racial equity. “To simply step out of the role, to step out of the responsibi­lity in this moment feels like a fundamenta­l abdication of the purpose of government.”

At the start of the pandemic, the Howard Center found, some communitie­s quickly responded, forming working groups to address both the housing and health needs of their homeless population­s, and securing emergency housing, such as hotels, trailers and even convention centers, to prevent communal spread.

In early March, for example, the homelessne­ss prevention and response coordinato­r in Colorado Springs, Colorado, arranged cross-department­al meetings with public health and nonprofits and, in just three weeks, an emergency isolation shelter with 100 beds was constructe­d.

San Diego opened its convention center as an emergency shelter, test

ing site and meal distributi­on hub on April 1 and, by early August, had sheltered 2,780 homeless people. Internal records show the city spent approximat­ely $2.8 million a month on the makeshift shelter, and expects to spend $3 million a month through the end of the year.

Others were slow or failed to respond.

The city manager in Sanger, California, opposed housing homeless people possibly infected with COVID-19 in emergency trailers in his town before he was ordered to take them by the county public health department, records show. Before the trailers arrived, city manager Tim Chapa appealed to the City Council. He said the city’s shelter “may not have the capacity to provide adequate medical support service to identified COVID + homeless,” he recounted in an April 17 email to a county official. Chapa said the trailers would be better in Fresno, where they ended up later that day.

In Daytona Beach, Florida, efforts to convert an old building into permanent housing for homeless residents failed, despite the project having funding and county support. Jeff White, executive director of Volusia/Flagler County Coalition for the Homeless, Inc., and another nonprofit leader argued that using COVID-19 funds to develop “permanent supportive housing” was better than paying for hotel rooms, which would be “basically burning money.” White told the Howard Center he moved on to another plan after city officials gave him “kind of a non-response” that didn’t show support for the project.

Leaders in El Centro, the main city in California’s Imperial County, repeatedly but unsuccessf­ully sought the county’s help with a testing program. “As to the homeless population, they are not going to enact anything unless there are any positive results within the population. They are not doing any pre-emptive activities,”

Adriana Nava, El Centro’s community services director, wrote to her colleagues on March 19.

Overall, records showed, localities faced two major problems in addressing the pandemic’s impact on their homeless population­s: a lack of readiness to work across department­s dealing with both housing and health and insufficie­nt data and testing to know who was getting sick and where.

“All states have been at a disadvanta­ge in their response to C-19 because the federal government has failed to adopt a unified, nationwide strategy. In fact, the national strategy seems to be ‘let states handle it,’” Barbara DiPietro, senior policy director for the National Health Care for the Homeless Council, said in an email. “This is the least efficient, most wasteful way to approach a crisis.”

 ?? INVESTIGAT­IVE JOURNALISM VIA AP
ANNA MARIA BARRY-JESTER/KHN AND THE HOWARD CENTER FOR ?? This July 24 photo shows a homeless encampment near a canal in El Centro, Calif. As support services have dwindled amid the COVID-19 pandemic, some homeless people in Imperial County have resorted to bathing in irrigation canals.
INVESTIGAT­IVE JOURNALISM VIA AP ANNA MARIA BARRY-JESTER/KHN AND THE HOWARD CENTER FOR This July 24 photo shows a homeless encampment near a canal in El Centro, Calif. As support services have dwindled amid the COVID-19 pandemic, some homeless people in Imperial County have resorted to bathing in irrigation canals.
 ?? ANNA MARIA BARRY-JESTER/KHN AND THE HOWARD CENTER FOR INVESTIGAT­IVE JOURNALISM VIA AP ?? Sergio Gomes Macias stands on street in Calexico, Calif., on July 23. Macias is a farmworker who sleeps on the street about 500 feet from the Mexican border.
ANNA MARIA BARRY-JESTER/KHN AND THE HOWARD CENTER FOR INVESTIGAT­IVE JOURNALISM VIA AP Sergio Gomes Macias stands on street in Calexico, Calif., on July 23. Macias is a farmworker who sleeps on the street about 500 feet from the Mexican border.

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