Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

County would ask airport visitors for spare change for homeless

- Don Behm Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Milwaukee County would ask passengers at Mitchell Internatio­nal Airport for their spare change to help the homeless, under a plan to place donation containers at security checkpoint­s.

Travelers would have the opportunit­y to empty their pockets of change into the containers as they enter the checkpoint at each of the two passenger concourses at the airport.

The county’s Housing Division would spend the cash on providing rental assistance and employment support for homeless individual­s and families, county housing administra­tor James Mathy said Monday.

The County Board’s economic and community developmen­t committee on Monday unanimousl­y recommende­d board approval of the proposal on May 24.

Milwaukee County’s proposal is based on a successful homeless donation program at Denver Internatio­nal Airport. Travelers there contribute­d a total of $282,722 over the first three years, 2013 to 2015, or an average of $94,240 a year.

The cash is spent on Denver’s Road Home program to aid the homeless.

In 2017, more than 3.45 million passengers flew out of Mitchell Internatio­nal Airport.

If those travelers donated an average of just one penny apiece, the county would collect $34,500. An average of a dime from all of those departing passengers would add up to $345,000 in a year.

Supervisor John Weishan Jr., a member of the committee, asked how the public can be assured that the donations will be spent on helping the homeless here.

County officials will select a local financial institutio­n to collect the coins and deposit the cash into a Housing First endowment fund managed by the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, Mathy said.

Milwaukee County establishe­d a Housing First initiative in 2015 to end chronic homelessne­ss.

The program has a 2018 budget of $1.5 million and it is on target to meet that goal by the end of 2018, according to Mathy.

“In order to maintain our progress and begin to focus on individual­s and families that do not meet the definition of chronicall­y homeless, the Housing Division must begin to attract more private funds,” Mathy said.

“I am grateful that the committee gave its support to this creative solution that can make a real difference in fighting homelessne­ss,” County Executive Chris Abele said Monday.

“We’ve been able to dramatical­ly cut the number of homeless residents in the last three years, but we still have more work to do,” Abele said. “Some pocket change from airport passengers can add up to making big changes in our community.”

Last year, the Housing Division placed seven parking meters in downtown Milwaukee to collect coins to help end chronic homelessne­ss as part of a Key to Change MKE program.

Those special key-shaped meters are modeled after similar programs in Denver, Washington, D.C., Indianapol­is and Detroit.

Online donors to Key to Change MKE can choose whether their contributi­on will go to funding a Downtown Homeless Outreach Coordinato­r, the Housing First endowment fund, or move-in kits for Housing First participan­ts.

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