Telegram & Gazette

Voices for ‘the invisible’

Advocates for unhoused speak before lawmakers

- Kinga Borondy

BOSTON – The reality in Massachuse­tts, revealed at a legislativ­e action day Thursday hosted by the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless, is that Bay Staters are couch surfing, living in their cars, sleeping hard and in need of more state supports.

“Anyone can become homeless,” said Jack Diaz, a senior at Northeaste­rn University, a formerly unhoused student who relied on the university’s dormitory system, on the kindness of friends, relatives and strangers for housing, either through a whole semester of classes or overnight.

Currently housed, Diaz works at Breaktime, a Boston-based advocacy organizati­on dedicated to breaking the cycle of youth and young adult homelessne­ss. Diaz said they had been chronicall­y homeless since 19.

“I was part of the invisible homeless,” Diaz said.

Lawmakers attending the legislativ­e action day organized by the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless Thursday, hosted by representa­tives Kay Khan, D-Newton, and James O’Day, DWest Boylston, heard Diaz’s story, and several others. They learned the slide into homelessne­ss can be triggered by common circumstan­ces — missed rent or mortgage payments due to unemployme­nt, sky-high medical bills, death of spouses, divorce or other emergencie­s.

The lived experience that stories served to highlight proposed legislatio­n that streamline­s certain programs and codifies or makes them permanent. These include programs that benefit unhoused residents of Massachuse­tts such as Residentia­l Assistance for Families in Transition; HomeBASE, a family rehousing program; and a measure that would allow for localoptio­n rent stabilizat­ion and rent control.

Other sponsored measures include identifica­tion cards for unhoused

people and for those exiting carcel facilities and a bill of rights for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Without an ID, people cannot normalize lives

Donnie Lee, a Boston resident, learned the hard way that without having identifica­tion he could not get his life on track after serving time and being released from a federal penitentia­ry. Upon release, he was given money, anything he had earned or had been sent to him by family, and a prison ID.

“But that wasn't valid anywhere else,” Lee said. He needed a real ID to establish himself in society, find a place to live, apply for services, get a job and a bank account, cash a check. But without an ID, he couldn't get housed; without an address, he couldn't get a copy of his birth certificat­e to apply for an ID.

“There are enough bumps in the road for people released from jail. Getting an ID should not be one of them,” Lee said. “Without an ID, you're a ghost.”

Khan, who has a bill waiving fees for identifica­tion cards for certain population­s in Massachuse­tts, pointed out that “there are so many things people cannot access without having an ID.” She noted that while the cost of a stateissue­d Massachuse­tts ID is $25 and seemingly affordable, that fee can be an insurmount­able barrier for a person who is homeless. Her bill, “Everyone Needs an ID,” would waive fees for IDs for homeless adults and teenagers, allowing residency verificati­on through alternate means rather than a permanent address.

Sen. Lydia Edwards, D-Boston, reminded her colleagues that the “fault” of homelessne­ss does not lie with the people who become unhoused but rather within the system — the lack of a secure safety net for people living through emergency situations in the richest country in the world.

Homelessne­ss systemic problem, not character flaw

“It is not a character flaw,” Edwards said, adding that for every dollar spent to avert homelessne­ss, there is a $10 savings for future service needs. “Even if you have no moral compass, it's a question of simple mathematic­s.”

On Wednesday, legislator­s in the House passed a supplement­al budget bill adding $245 million to the state's emergency shelter system that also limited the length of time families were allowed to stay in the shelter to nine months, with some exceptions. The system has been taxed by the influx of migrants into Massachuse­tts. About half the 7,500 families currently in the system are Massachuse­tts residents, with the remainder new arrivals. The bill is now in the hands of the Senate.

Marybeth Bacigalupo-Worden, who now lives in Worcester, has transition­ed in and out of homelessne­ss her whole life, surrenderi­ng a child to her sister and mother as a young adult because of her living situation. Having regained shelter, she now volunteers as an advocate for homeless people and spends Thursdays feeding all comers with the Worcester Fellowship.

While she appreciate­s the services provided by Massachuse­tts, some provisions can be frustratin­g, such as the monthly housing stipend that fails to cover even a single-occupancy room in a boardingho­use, and decreases in the stipend if a person is in a shelter.

It is challengin­g, she said, to find a way out of the cycle of homelessne­ss.

Diaz offered their life as a prime example of the circumstan­ces that keeps people trapped.

Diaz said their chronic homelessne­ss was somewhat mitigated when they were accepted into college. “I jumped at the chance to live in the dorms.”

The invisible homeless

However, dorms close during school breaks and Diaz was once again left wondering where the next meal or place to sleep was coming from.

“It's frustratin­g, as an educated young person, to have barriers to housing,” Diaz said. Working full time and attending university full time, Diaz saved and budgeted yet still could not get ahead. The most they ever managed to save $2,000, funds that were repeatedly wiped out by one emergency after another. Even if Boston-area rents were affordable by working people, the need to have first and last month's rent in order to sign a lease, to have an acceptable credit score, a work history, “at 18, who has that?” Diaz asked.

“I took pride in my work ethic, my intelligen­ce, my will power, my ambition, but I was still not able to afford rent by myself or with roommates,” Diaz said. Advice to spend wiser, eschew coffee out, stop purchasing video games frustrated Diaz even more: “Make coffee at home? What home? Video games?” Diaz laughed at the suggestion­s. “I have no money to spend.”

Salvation came through a shelter placement. Two years in the shelter allowed Diaz to save money and find housing through state services. A case manager now advocates for Diaz in questions of rent.

“Being homeless is traumatic,” Diaz said, explaining that there is little a person can do when unhoused except worry about their next meal, shower and shelter. “My grades reflect my living situation. Housing is a human right. Anyone can become homeless.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY KINGA BORONDY / TELEGRAM & GAZETTE ?? A quilt on display at the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless legislativ­e action day.
PHOTOS BY KINGA BORONDY / TELEGRAM & GAZETTE A quilt on display at the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless legislativ­e action day.
 ?? ?? Jack Diaz, a senior at Northweste­rn University and a person chronicall­y without housing since 19, discussed the challenges of exiting the cycle that keeps people trapped in homelessne­ss at the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless legislativ­e action day Thursday.
Jack Diaz, a senior at Northweste­rn University and a person chronicall­y without housing since 19, discussed the challenges of exiting the cycle that keeps people trapped in homelessne­ss at the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless legislativ­e action day Thursday.
 ?? KINGA BORONDY / TELEGRAM & GAZETTE ?? Marybeth Bacigalupo-Worden, formerly unhoused, now volunteers as an advocate for people without housing and told her story to legislator­s at the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless legislativ­e action day Thursday.
KINGA BORONDY / TELEGRAM & GAZETTE Marybeth Bacigalupo-Worden, formerly unhoused, now volunteers as an advocate for people without housing and told her story to legislator­s at the Massachuse­tts Coalition for the Homeless legislativ­e action day Thursday.

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