Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Mass. sets up shelter for new migrant groups

- By Steve Leblanc

Massachuse­tts has begun awarding grants to local agencies to set up temporary housing sites for homeless families as officials grapple with finding newly arriving migrants places to stay after hitting a state-imposed limit of 7,500 families in the state’s emergency homeless shelter system.

Catholic Charities Boston is the first organizati­on to be awarded a grant to provide temporary rooms to extremely low-income families with children and pregnant individual­s, the United Way of Massachuse­tts Bay announced this week.

The grant will pay for a site in the greater Boston area that opened on Tuesday evening and can accommodat­e up to 27 families, or about 81 people, as they wait to enter the state’s emergency shelter system, officials said.

Catholic Charities Boston will provide bedding, meals, staff, and security. The site is available to families eligible for the the state’s family shelter system but who could not be immediatel­y placed in a shelter.

Democratic Gov. Maura Healey announced the $5 million grant program earlier this month.

Sarah Bartley of the United Way said the agency has already received several other grant applicatio­ns. The grants are meant to support community gathering spaces with restrooms and heat, such as places of worship, community centers, and school buildings, to provide safe space for families to find short-term, congregate shelter, meals and other basic necessitie­s, she said.

The flexible program will remain in place through the winter and spring, officials said.

On Monday, the state began letting homeless families stay overnight in the state transporta­tion building in Boston.

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