The Denver Post

DENVER HOMELESS ARE AT RISK TOO

Denver’s failure to protect homeless people from the new coronaviru­s puts everyone at risk

- By Andy Bosselman Guest Commentary

How is social distancing possible when you sleep in a room with hundreds of people bunked two to a bed? A writer says Denver must protect the homeless.

How do you maintain six feet of social distancing when you sleep in a room with hundreds of people bunked two to a bed, each spaced no more than three feet apart? These are the conditions for many of Denver’s estimated 3,900 to 5,000 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in Denver. Yet a week after conf irmed cases of COVID-19 f irst showed up among this population, the city had no specif ic plans to stop the virus from spreading in shelters and encampment­s.

Uncontroll­able outbreaks ignited on luxury cruise ships where guests stayed in private rooms. Within homeless shelters and encampment­s, the tight group accommodat­ions certainly pose an even greater risk of fast-moving breakouts, which could quickly extend to shelter workers, volunteers and the wider population — potentiall­y sending hundreds or even thousands to the state’s increasing­ly crowded hospitals.

On March 26, two people tested at the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless received word that they had contracted the new coronaviru­s, according to Cathy Alderman, a spokespers­on for the nonprofit. One had stayed in a shelter the night before. A week later, 10 more home

less people had tested positive, according to Denverite, and 74 are awaiting test results. And almost none of the people who will enter shelters tonight have been tested.

How should a city prevent the spread of COVID-19 among people experienci­ng homelessne­ss? San Francisco, which has an estimated homeless population of around 8,011, sets a good example.

On March 27, Mayor London Breed started moving people out of group settings and placing them in 300 hotel rooms. She then promised to find an additional 3,000 rooms within a week.

For those who remain in shelters, many are being moved out of crowded facilities to a tennis club and the city’s convention center. In these temporary accommodat­ions, one-person beds are spaced 10 feet apart.

While San Francisco has acted aggressive­ly to stop the spread of the new coronaviru­s among people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, Denver, as of Thursday, had secured just 150 private rooms and reserves them only for those who have been exposed to the virus, are waiting for test results or are already unwell.

Without forceful prevention efforts, Denver’s shelters are places where silent viral grenades may have already exploded. That’s because nearly a quarter of the people infected with COVID19 may never show symptoms. And asymptomat­ic people may be the disease’s most prolific “super spreaders.”

Early in China’s outbreak, people who had symptoms so mild they never bothered to see a doctor transmitte­d an estimated 86% of new infections, according to a study published in Science by Jeffrey Shaman, a professor at Columbia University.

Yet these well-known facts don’t seem to factor into Denver’s approach to managing the disease among people experienci­ng homelessne­ss. The city’s COVID19 Action Plan required officials to develop a homeless “strategy” by March 13. When I asked for a copy of it, Loa Esquilin Garcia, a spokespers­on for Denver’s Emergency Operations Center, said there’s nothing to see.

“There is no document for this. A strategy does not mean a standalone plan,” she wrote in an email. “We have objectives and tasks associated with people experienci­ng homelessne­ss that we are working on.”

I pressed her over the phone about the objectives and tasks she mentioned. Is Denver finding thousands of private rooms where people could stay to prevent the spread of the disease? Are large spaces being converted into shelters that would allow greater social distancing at both the new and existing shelters?

Esquilin Garcia promised that things were in the works. But she refused to specify any of the objectives or tasks she said the city had developed. She also would not disclose when these unnamed actions would happen, nor how many people they would serve.

Instead, she pointed to the Glenarm Recreation Center, which the city transforme­d into a shelter last week. The move added 200 new beds for women. But it follows the Denver Rescue Mission closing its 200-bed Holly Center due to a staff shortage, which forced hundreds of men into even closer quarters within the organizati­on’s other shelters.

Shelters, which typically operate only at night, aren’t the only places where people experienci­ng homelessne­ss are crammed closer together. Many are crowding into the city’s few day shelters after being locked out of nowclosed libraries and cafes. The agency also enacted regulation­s used to kick people out of its bus terminal and the plazas around its stations — regulation­s heartlessl­y enforced by an apparently fastgrowin­g swarm of armed rent-acops.

Denver is also failing to follow federal guidelines to prevent new COVID-19 infections among people living in tent encampment­s. The CDC suggests cities immediatel­y stop sweeping encampment­s. Instead, outreach workers should urge people to space tents at least 12 feet apart. Cities should also provide portable toilets and handwashin­g stations nearby. But Denver doesn’t even know where its encampment­s are, according to Esquilin Garcia.

“There is no formal tracking of encampment­s across city department­s,” she said.

It’s time for Mayor Michael Hancock to correct this lapse in the city’s approach to reducing the spread of this new coronaviru­s. “Management” of people after they are infected isn’t good enough.

Until every shelter guest can be tested, Hancock must follow San Francisco’s lead and bring the number of respite rooms immediatel­y to 300. He should commit to finding thousands of more rooms within a week. With student housing emptied and 11,000 mostly vacant hotel rooms available in Downtown Denver, every homeless person should be given a private space.

If such rooms cannot be provided to all homeless people, temporary shelters should be opened so that people in both new and existing facilities can sleep at least 10 feet apart.

New day centers should be created, too, perhaps in libraries that have closed.

Denver’s 19-page COVID-19 Action Plan fails to address how to stop the virus from spreading among people experienci­ng homelessne­ss. Public health strategies are only as strong as their weakest link. If one segment of the population has an outbreak, it will spread to others. In this state of emergency, plans can be adapted.

Considerin­g all the sacrifices everyone in Denver is making — the lost jobs, the closed businesses and the social isolation — the city must work more quickly and aggressive­ly to stop new infections among people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

 ?? Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? Residents at the Salvation Army Crossroads Shelter watch the news inside the facility on March 16 in Denver. The city has installed hand-washing stations at the facility, which are mandatory for guests who eat dinner at the shelter to use, and the staff have stepped up their efforts to stave off coronaviru­s by cleaning more thoroughly throughout the day and during dinner in Salvation Army facilities.
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post Residents at the Salvation Army Crossroads Shelter watch the news inside the facility on March 16 in Denver. The city has installed hand-washing stations at the facility, which are mandatory for guests who eat dinner at the shelter to use, and the staff have stepped up their efforts to stave off coronaviru­s by cleaning more thoroughly throughout the day and during dinner in Salvation Army facilities.
 ?? Christian Murdock, The Gazette ?? Jason Horn, of the Springs Rescue Mission, sets up cots in the City Auditorium on Wednesday as the Colorado Springs shelter sets up an isolation shelter for homeless people with symptoms of the COVID-19 virus, or who are discharged from hospitals after having been treated for it. The shelter, which opened Wednesday night, will hold up to 100 people.
Christian Murdock, The Gazette Jason Horn, of the Springs Rescue Mission, sets up cots in the City Auditorium on Wednesday as the Colorado Springs shelter sets up an isolation shelter for homeless people with symptoms of the COVID-19 virus, or who are discharged from hospitals after having been treated for it. The shelter, which opened Wednesday night, will hold up to 100 people.
 ??  ?? Andy Bosselman is a freelance journalist and past editor of Streetsblo­g Denver. Follow him on Twitter at @andybossel­man.
Andy Bosselman is a freelance journalist and past editor of Streetsblo­g Denver. Follow him on Twitter at @andybossel­man.

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