The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pandemic relief money helps move homeless into apartments

City of Atlanta aims to assist 800 people offff the streets.

- By J. D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ ajc. com

A few months ago, armed with cash from the fifirst coronaviru­s relief package, the city of Atlanta set out with an ambitious goal: Moving 800 people offff the streets and into their own apartments.

The s cope of t he projec t was unlike any past efffffffff­ffforts to curb homelessne­ss in Atlanta. Case workers visited homeless encampment­s and moved hundreds of people into a hotel downtown, while making calls to landlords and applying for

open apartments across metro Atlanta.

And the program is seeing results. Partners for Home, the nonprofit that heads up the city’s homelessne­ss strat

e g y, s a i d r oughly 45 0 f o rmerly homeless individual­s have already moved into apartments, many with one- year

leases.

An additional 190 are still going through the process and are set to move in within the next few weeks.

“Once I got that apartment ... it felt like a load had been lifted from off my shoulders,” said Efrem Belvin, who was recently given housing through the new program. “This is a really, really big step for me.”

Belvin moved to Atlanta about 15 years ago and has been homeless on and off for the past few years. He was doing OK before the pandemic hit , selling beer at sports games and other big events — “having the time of my life,” he said — but that all dried up a year ago. Since then, he has spent a lot of nights under bridge overpasses, worried about finding food, shelter and clothes.

That changed in November when an outreach worker approached him under an I- 20 overpass and told him about the program. He moved into the hotel and applied for an apartment two weeks later. He now lives in a one- bedroom unit in Stone Mountain.

“All the way through the end, I was saying, this cannot be happening to me,” said Belvin, 52. “Even down to the point when I signed that lease.”

The housing effort was launched in the fall using about $ 18 million from federal coronaviru­s relief allocated to the city. Partners for

Home added an additional $ 6.5 million f rom private philanthro­pic contributi­ons.

It aims to help people who are chronicall­y homeless, on the verge of being chronicall­y homeless or people facing homelessne­ss who are between 18 and 24 years old.

The goal is to transition t he chronic ally homeless into a permanent housing program during t he next year or two. The younger

people who are housed may develop a cost- sharing agreement over time and contribute to the rent as they get back on their feet.

Cathryn Marchman, the executive director of Partners for Home, said she has been pleasantly surprised by the number of apartments that have been secured. She said the city has been able to pay fees to landlords to hold some apartments before

move- ins happen, which has been a big help.

Eventually, though, COVID19 relief funding will run out. Marchman and other leaders in homelessne­ss prevention efforts said they hope state and local government­s will continue to put dollars toward these rehousing efforts.

“The work that we’re doing right now is a huge undertakin­g,” Marchman said. “We’re creating a road map for how

we can achieve large- scale housing placements, and I think now the question is, ‘ How do we sustain it?’”

As part of the program, outreach workers are going to homeless encampment­s across the city and offering housing to those who live there in order to close the camps down. Marchman said about 250 people from eight encampment­s were moved into the hotel and are in the pipeline for the housing program.

Of course, there have been hiccups along the way; the city still must find 200 more apartments to reach its goal. Some rental applicatio­ns have been denied, and a few people have been hesitant to take part.

But Brad Schweers, the executive director of Intown Collaborat­ive Ministries, said that number has been minimal. He described one encampment where 34 people lived. His team visited and offered to move them into the hotel, and all but one accepted. The encampment was cleared out in November.

His organizati­on has helped find apartments for 160 people since Dec. 1. Previously, the most people it has ever housed in a year was 120.

“We’ve never had such amazing housing resources available,” Schweers said.

For Belvin, living on his own is“totally scary ,” he said, but he has a case worker who checks in with him to discuss how things are going. He plans to get back to work soon and is confident the newfound stability will help him get back on his feet.

“For a while, I can say that I started to lose hope, and I started to see that this is what it was going to be,” he said, describing his experience being unsheltere­d. “I don’t want to go back to that.”

Landlords in metro Atlanta who are interested in participat­ing in the program can email listings@ opendoorsa­tl. org or call 470- 222- 3213 for more informatio­n.

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Partners for Home, the nonprofifi­t that heads up Atlanta’s homelessne­ss strategy, said about 450 formerly homeless people have moved into apartments.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Partners for Home, the nonprofifi­t that heads up Atlanta’s homelessne­ss strategy, said about 450 formerly homeless people have moved into apartments.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? The housing effort was launched in the fall using about $ 18 million from federal coronaviru­s relief allocated to the city. Partners for Home added an additional $ 6.5 million from private philanthro­pic contributi­ons.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC The housing effort was launched in the fall using about $ 18 million from federal coronaviru­s relief allocated to the city. Partners for Home added an additional $ 6.5 million from private philanthro­pic contributi­ons.

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