Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

1st wave of COVID-19 homeless fill Central Florida shelters

- By Kate Santich

For months, Central Florida leaders have warned of a tidal wave of homelessne­ss once an eviction ban expires at year’s end. But local homeless shelters are already seeing the first casualties of the COVID-19 recession show up at their doors.

And many of newly homeless are single mothers or couples with young children.

“First of all, the moratorium­s don’t help people who’ve been living paycheck to paycheck in our hotels because they don’t have a lease. And they don’t have the documentat­ion required to get rental assistance,” said Lisa Portelli, senior advisor on homelessne­ss and social services to Orlando May or Buddy Dyer. “Those are the most vulnerable.”

“We’ve got 58 families in housing today that were left homeless due to the COVID pandemic. If not for that and the diversion program, there would be a lot more homeless families. But we are concerned about what lies ahead. It could be that perfect storm.”

At the Coalition for the Homeless of Central Florida, president and CEO Allison Krall has witnessed a significan­t rise in the number of people who report being homeless for the first time— nowover 40% of those seeking help.

“I think in light of where things are with the economy, with the number of people who have been laid off and furloughed, I’m not shocked,” Krall said. “But it is still heartbreak­ing.”

The coalition’s two shelters currently house over 360 people, more than half of them women and children. LaQuinda Thomas, 31, is among them.

She arrived in early August, her 2-year-old son in tow.

A former cashier at the Amway Center, her job disappeare­d with the coronaviru­s shutdown of public sporting events and concerts. With no formal rental agreementt­o protect her, she made it five months before being evicted.

“I was going to reach out to family, but everybody has their own situation, so there was no help,” she said. “The last option was to come here.”

Her sister, whoworks at a restaurant, had her hours cut. Shewound up at the coalition, too.

The coalition was able to house both of them, but other local shelters are full or nearly so.

“We’re at capacity,” said Majorie Pierre, an executive with The Salvation Army in Orlando. “Unfortunat­ely, we have even less room in the women’s housing, where we’ve had to limit the number of families because of social-distancing requiremen­ts. For the men, we had a little more flexibilit­y, but with an influx of individual­s we’re full there, too.”

In all, the agency is housing about 300 men, women and children each night. Another280­peoplearen­owliving at the Orlando Union Rescue Mission’s two shelters in Orlando, both of which are also full.

“The first two months of the pandemic, we didn’t admit any new guests in order to protect the oneswhower­e alreadyher­e,” saidFredCl­ayton, the mission’s president and CEO. “But since then we’ve had an increase particular­ly in the number of single moms and [couples] with children. Now we’re at capacity again — and we have awaiting list.”

Three weeks ago, he took in the last family — a couple with five children, all under age 10. The dad, a constructi­on worker, had lost his fulltime work. Then opportunit­ies at the labor pool driedup.

They’d been living in a rent-by-the-week motel room along the tourism corridor in Osceola County.

Claytonwor­ries there will be many more such families in the months ahead. Tens of thousands of Central Florida’s low-wage workers have stayed housed through federal unemployme­nt aid, CARESAct rental assistance, a statewide eviction ban and now a nationwide eviction moratorium by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that expires Dec. 31.

But at the same time that

— Allison Krall, president and CEO of Coalition for the Homeless of Central Florida

ends, so will the current CARESAct funding for rental assistance, which must be spent by Dec. 30 to avoid forfeiture.

“So just as that money runs out, the moratorium on evictions issupposed­to end,” saidMartha Are, CEO of the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida, which draws down federal grant funding, recruits landlords and runs an intake system to prioritize who gets into housing and when. “It’ll be over just as people need it — unless Congress extends it.”

Despite shelters being full, leaders have no desire to build more. The strategy in recent years leans on diversion programs and finding people subsidized housing within the community.

At the coalition, for instance, more than 3,000 families and individual­s have been diverted from the shelter since 2018. Housing counselors meet with people seeking help and ask about options — relatives who might be able to share their home for a little extra rent money or low-cost room rentals in the community. Another coalition program helps pay for apartments and gradually lessens the subsidy as people regain their financial footing.

“We’ve got 58 families in housing today that were left homeless due to the COVID pandemic,” Krall said. “If not for that and the diversion program, there would be a lot more homeless families. But we are concerned about what lies ahead. It could be that perfect storm.”

Thomas, who just started anewcashie­r’s job lastweek, tries not to look too far down the road. She is grateful for the shelter, the day care it provides for her son, and a social worker there who counsels her on next steps.

“I have my days where I feel depressed, but then I can go to my caseworker — who is onmy side100%— and she gives me a little pep talk. She’ll make me feel good about myself,” Thomas said. “So I don’t give up. I’ve got my [son], so I’ve got to just keep pushing forward.”

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? LaQuinda Thomas holds her 2-year-old son, Wesley, at the Center for Women and Families of the Coalition for the Homeless. Thomas lost her job because of the pandemic.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ ORLANDO SENTINEL LaQuinda Thomas holds her 2-year-old son, Wesley, at the Center for Women and Families of the Coalition for the Homeless. Thomas lost her job because of the pandemic.

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