Boston Herald

Shelter residency requiremen­t pushed

- By Chris Van Buskirk cvanbuskir­k@bostonhera­ld.com

Senate Republican­s are gearing up to make another push this week to put in place a residency requiremen­t for the emergency shelter system, a policy change that has so far found scant support among ruling Democrats on Beacon Hill.

Top Republican leaders have argued for months that restrictin­g access to state-run shelters is necessary to lessen the overwhelmi­ng demand on the system in Massachuse­tts, which is housing both migrants fleeing unstable home countries and locals reeling from high costs of living.

But Democrats, who control much of what moves forward in the Legislatur­e, have signaled they are not interested in the idea, with some questionin­g the constituti­onality of a rule requiring someone to have lived in Massachuse­tts for a certain amount of time before gaining access to emergency shelters.

The debate could flare up againtoday, when the Senate is scheduled to take up a bill that would guarantee shelter residents only nine consecutiv­e months of housing with the possibilit­y of 90day extensions if they meet goals laid out in individual­ized “rehousing plans” or other criteria.

Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr and Sen. Ryan Fattman, a Sutton Republican, filed separate amendments institutin­g a six month residency requiremen­t.

“There’s been a proclamati­on that it is unconstitu­tional. There is a fair legal argument that it is, in fact, constituti­onal and we should continue to pursue that,” Tarr said. “We should … think about, as we are now in the realm of modifying the right to shelter law, fundamenta­lly changing it, how we want to change it, and what are the contours of constituti­onality.”

Top Senate Democrats have not spoken publicly about their proposal since it was released earlier this week. But House Democrats shot down a similar Republican­led attempt to impose a residency requiremen­t during a debate on their own bill earlier this month.

Legislatio­n advanced Monday by the Senate’s budget writing committee is a shift away from a House-approved plan that also capped time in shelter at nine months but offered automatic three-month extensions to veterans, pregnant women, people with disabiliti­es, those with a job, or people in workforce training.

Both chambers largely leave the process to kick people out of shelter to the Healey administra­tion, though they do require 90-day notices before shelter services end and in different forms, limit the number of families who can be asked to leave shelter in a given week.

The two bills also diverge in the way each branch proposes funding the financiall­y-strained shelter system for the rest of the fiscal year, with the Senate handing the Healey administra­tion more latitude over a pot of one-time pandemic-era dollars during fiscal years 2024 and 2025.

Senators will comb through 66 amendments to their bill when they gavel into session this morning, including one from Sen. Becca Rausch that calls on the Office of Inspector General to conduct a “review and analysis” of emergency shelter contracts and expenditur­es.

 ?? STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD ?? State senators are scheduled to debate a bill today that would impose a nine-month time limit on emergency shelter stays. It’s a move many Democrats have fought.
STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD State senators are scheduled to debate a bill today that would impose a nine-month time limit on emergency shelter stays. It’s a move many Democrats have fought.

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