Boston Herald

Shelter system maxing out

- By Matthew Medsger mmedsger@bostonhera­ld.com

The flow of migrants into Massachuse­tts has strained the state’s shelter system such it is now forecast to hit the breaking point by the end of the month, according to the governor.

Gov. Maura Healey announced yesterday that the tens of thousands currently living in stateprovi­ded housing may be among the last the state can afford to shelter. Without interventi­on by the Biden Administra­tion, Healey said, the system will not be able to help any further.

“For months now, we have been expanding shelter capacity at an unsustaina­ble rate to meet rising demand. Despite the heroic work of public officials, shelter providers and the National Guard, we have reached a point where we can no longer safely or responsibl­y expand,” Healey said.

According to the governor, as of October 16 there are 7,000 families — 23,000 individual­s, she said, half of whom are children and all of whom are here legally — using the state shelter system. Massachuse­tts is alone among the 50 states in guaranteei­ng women with children and families access to shelter by law.

That “right to shelter” provision has run up against a migrant influx the state was never prepared to handle on its own, Healey said. The state is not, she stressed, doing away with the right to shelter law, but after the end of the month families in need of shelter may have to wait for space to free.

In light of the migrant crisis slowly building in the Bay State, Healey announced she would appoint retired Lt. Gen. Scott Rice as the Emergency Assistance Director. Rice previously served as the Adjutant General of the Massachuse­tts National Guard and will coordinate the state’s response to the crisis going forward.

“General Rice has extensive experience leading large scale emergency management operations, and we are confident he is the right person to lead us through this new phase of the emergency shelter system,” Healy said.

Healey also announced that the administra­tion will connect migrants in shelters with job training through a partnershi­p with Commonweal­th Corporatio­n Foundation while they wait for work authorizat­ion.

When asked if her message should serve as a warning to migrants that Massachuse­tts is full, the governor said that, at the very least, shelter may not immediatel­y be provided to anyone who arrives.

“It’s certainly a communicat­ion that we are reaching capacity and therefore don’t expect to be able to house people the way we’ve been able to house people in the existing infrastruc­ture,” she said.

The Healey Administra­tion and leaders in the Legislatur­e have been pleading with the President Joe Biden and his staff to intervene in Massachuse­tts. Last week, officials from the Department of Homeland Security were in the Bay State to survey the situation on the ground.

So far, however, it seems the Commonweal­th is on its own.

“It’s now time for the state to approve more funding for shelters and for Congress to get its act together and pass immigratio­n reform that allows immigrants to work,” Elizabeth Sweet, Executive Director of the Massachuse­tts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, said after the governor’s announceme­nt.

 ?? NANCY LANE — BOSTON HERALD ?? Gov. Maura Healey, with Lt. General Scott Rice, gives an update on the emergency family shelter program.
NANCY LANE — BOSTON HERALD Gov. Maura Healey, with Lt. General Scott Rice, gives an update on the emergency family shelter program.

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