Miami Herald (Sunday)

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“We don’t have new applicatio­ns because we can’t offer more housing,” said Julio Ponce, director of the Hialeah Housing Authority.

Every four or five years there is an applicatio­n period for the voucher program. Some 50,000 people apply and of these, around 2,500 are approved, Ponce said.

The Hialeah City Council on June 28 approved the use of $241,553 for “the creation of homeless outreach services to ensure the city’s homeless are provided with engagement and emergency shelter,” according to the ordinance.

“We have a significan­t number of people who have become homeless . ... We have to assist them, refer them and if necessary,

Hialeah has a problem with illegal residentia­l units, place them in a hotel until a shelter is available,” Ruiz said.

The city will have two employees serving as Grants Department outreach workers to identify and engage the homeless. To secure shelters for qualified Hialeah residents, the grant office contacted staff from Miami-Dade County’s sister program, the Homeless Trust, who said there were a few shelter providers in the area with the capacity to welcome new people in need of housing.

Ruiz assured that the emergency budget will include money for shelter beds, as well as explore “ways to secure rapid rehousing funds so that individual experience­s of homelessne­ss can be as brief as humanly possible.”

Hialeah does not have statistics on the number of homeless people in the city, according to the City Clerk’s office. Ruiz told el Nuevo Herald that since she assumed the interim position in April, his office has assisted eight households.

“Our goal now would be to keep data on the number and demographi­cs of the people we serve,” she said.

Councilman Bryan Calvo said that “the problem is that we don’t know the number, and we don’t know the causes either. We have to identify the needs of these people. I get the impression that many of these people are on the streets because of rent increases.”

During a recent City Council meeting on the funds to help people, officials anecdotall­y outlined the problem. They said that the new level of homelessne­ss has “never been seen before in the city.”

“I have some reports from the neighborho­ods of people sleeping on the grass, between two houses,” Mayor Esteban Bovo Jr. said. “Although many people don’t report it, it is happening in our communitie­s.”

Ismare Monreal, Bovo’s chief of staff, told el Nuevo Herald that the number of police reports of people sleeping on the city streets has increased.

“We are seeing homeless people in parks, in shopping malls. We had never seen this. When we receive police reports, we forward them to the Homeless

Trust and Iglesia Rescate [Rescue Church] as well as other no-profit organizati­ons,” she said.

Calvo has noticed “the problem in the last six months, particular­ly at night. I have seen them sleeping on bus benches, in tents between bushes, in different areas of the city — along Okeechobee [Road], in the west, on 49th Street, in shopping malls ...”

HELP FROM CHURCH

The Iglesia Rescate on East Fourth Avenue in Hialeah, establishe­d more than 30 years ago, has been working as an “improvised” community center for eight years due to the needs of the homeless on the city streets, said Pastor David Monduy.

In 2014, he started a program called “Casa Rescate” (Rescue House) for people who became addicts and were displaced to the streets.

“Ninety percent of homeless people are alcoholics. Alcohol robs work discipline and human dignity,” Monduy said.

The effort got more than 14 people off the streets, according to the spiritual leader.

The pastor said a new surge of homelessne­ss has come with the recent arrivals of Cuban, Nicaraguan and Haitian migrants who don’t have a place to sleep.

“The city cannot change addicted people, but it can help those who are arriving and have nowhere to live,” he said.

Iglesia Rescate has become a refuge for three “functional” men, as the executive pastor Moisés García, in charge of the administra­tive and operationa­l area of the religious institutio­n, calls them.

Garcia explained that for the first time, Iglesia Rescate is housing homeless people on the premises. It does it because “they have shown an intention to recover themselves.”

Edison, Lázaro and Wilberto have 90 days to spend the night in the church’s facilities. During that time, the pastoral community expects them to get back into society, García said.

A month and a half ago, a children’s classroom inside the church was refurbishe­d as a temporary shelter to house the three men.

They are allowed to stay on the premises from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m. while looking for a place to live.

CREATING SHELTERS IS RULED OUT

Councilman Calvo said the issue has not reached the point of the city needing shelters to house the homeless. But he has expressed concern about homeless people sleeping in front of businesses.

“This is a problem that must be tackled,” Calvo said. “It must be corrected from the human point of view, but also from the sanitary point of view because it could create areas of violence or drugs, as is already the case in other cities in the country.”

Monduy noted that homeless people are most often seen around hardware stores on Palm Avenue and along streets in the eastern part of the city. Between West Third Avenue and 23rd Street, a group of homeless people frequently meet in an area with sheds and where a church usually takes its “shower truck” for them to clean up twice a week.

In the area is Arturo Báez, a 59-year-old Cuban man, affected by sunburn and mosquito bites. He says he has lived on the street since he was 11 .

“I was the oldest of three siblings and there was not enough food for everyone,” he said. “I was on the street in Cuba, then in Costa Rica when I emigrated with my family — my sisters, mother and grandmothe­r. I have been on the streets of Hialeah since we moved to this country in 1982.”

The man reported that the greatest risk of living on the street is that “they want to take your little money.

“The devil wants to take advantage of you, but I am tired. I have nowhere to lay my head. If you feel bad, there is no one to call. I am alone against the demons.”

Báez assured that he is fine, surviving on “small jobs” throwing out garbage and helping to load sheds. But “I am already old and tired,” he said.

STATE’S HOMELESS COUNT IS THIRD IN U.S.

The state of Florida, with 27,487 homeless people, ranks third in the number of homeless after California (161,582) and

New York (91,271), according to the U.S. Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss.

The five Florida counties with the highest number of homeless people are Miami-Dade, with 3,224 people; Broward, 2,561; Pinellas, 2,307; Orange, 1,162, and Duval, 1,137, according to 2021 data from the Florida Department of Health.

Marcia Fudge, U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, recently visited Miami.

“I think we overlook homelessne­ss in this country,” she said, noting that high rent and mortgage rates contribute to homelessne­ss.

“In the greatest nation in the world, almost 500,000 people sleep on the streets … every night. It’s a travesty.”

Guerra, the homeless Hialeah woman, said the hardest thing for her is nighttime.

“I sleep with one eye open,” she said. “I would like to have a place to live again.”

Veronica Egui Brito: 305-376-2664, VeroEgui

 ?? VERONICA EGUI BRITO vegui@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Arturo Báez, 59, has spent most of his life on the streets, first in his native Cuba, later in Costa Rica and for 40 years in Hialeah. He said he survives by working ‘small jobs’ at warehouses and other places in the city.
VERONICA EGUI BRITO vegui@elnuevoher­ald.com Arturo Báez, 59, has spent most of his life on the streets, first in his native Cuba, later in Costa Rica and for 40 years in Hialeah. He said he survives by working ‘small jobs’ at warehouses and other places in the city.
 ?? VERONICA EGUI BRITO vegui@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? A classroom for children inside the Iglesia Rescate, a church located on East 4th Avenue in Hialeah, has been refurbishe­d as a temporary shelter to house three men who otherwise would have nowhere to spend the night. They are allowed on the premises from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m.
VERONICA EGUI BRITO vegui@elnuevoher­ald.com A classroom for children inside the Iglesia Rescate, a church located on East 4th Avenue in Hialeah, has been refurbishe­d as a temporary shelter to house three men who otherwise would have nowhere to spend the night. They are allowed on the premises from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m.
 ?? ??

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