The Telegram (St. John's)

Pandemic places pressures on New York’s homeless

- PETER SZEKELY ANGELA MOORE

NEW YORK — An influx of homeless people into Manhattan's Hell's Kitchen neighbourh­ood after an emergency move by New York City to ease crowding in shelters has been a fact of pandemic life for the neighborho­od since last spring.

Many of the newcomers, living in nearby hotel rooms contracted by the city, have been largely inconspicu­ous. But others with mental health and drug problems have become a growing presence in Hell's Kitchen and adjacent Times Square.

As the city looks to welcome back tourists and office workers a with the pandemic lifting, the complaints have grown louder.

A city with people camped on sidewalks is much different than the one suburban commuters left when they started working from home as much of the country locked down in March 2020.

"They make me feel like I wish I could do something," said Rachel Goldstein, an IT director, as she emerged from Penn Station, a major rail hub, last week for her first on-site workday since the pandemic began.

Giselle Routhier, policy director for the Coalition for the Homeless advocacy group, faulted the state and city for not providing enough mental health services and for "shuffling people" between locations.

"What we actually need for the city to do is to offer folks on the streets access to single occupancy rooms where they can come inside and feel that they're safe from the elements and from the spread of the coronaviru­s," she said.

Longer term, the city needs "more robust housing production for extremely low-income and homeless households, particular­ly for single adults," many of whom were pushed into homelessne­ss by the economic fallout of the pandemic, Routhier said.

Several of the eight Democrats running for mayor in next Tuesday's primary election also have called for converting hotels into housing for the homeless.

As the pandemic raged last spring, the Department of Homeless Services (DHS) relocated 10,000 people from crowded shelters to 67 hotels whose tourism, business and convention bookings had dried up.

A portion of them, more than one-fifth, were packed into hotels in the Chelsea and Hell's Kitchen neighborho­ods west of Times Square and the Theater District, the New York Post reported, citing a letter from Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer that it obtained.

In a precinct that includes Times Square, reports of assaults and robberies have shot up 185 per cent and 173 per cent, respective­ly, so far this year, even as citywide assaults rose by only eight per cent and robberies fell five per cent, according to New York Police Department statistics.

ARRAY OF COMPLAINTS

Scott Sobol, 44, a real estate agent who lives in Hell's Kitchen, believes only a few of the homeless residents were responsibl­e for the additional complaints, and faulted officials for not vetting them for mental health issues, drug problems and criminal histories.

"What (neighbors) want is to stop getting harassed on the street," he said. "If a homeless rehabilita­tion center can coexist with a sense of polite life, we have no issues with it."

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