Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

City explores giving jobs to homeless

- GINNY MONK

Little Rock is exploring a program that would pull the homeless off the streets and give them city jobs for a couple of days every week, city officials told homelessne­ss advocates Wednesday.

There’s A Better Way, a program already implemente­d in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., pays the homeless city dollars to do jobs like picking up trash or cleaning up at the zoo. Officials from Albuquerqu­e are coming in September to explain details of their program to homeless advocates in Little Rock, said B.J. Wyrick, Little Rock city director for Ward 7.

Wyrick and Vice Mayor Kathy Webb, who is also the city director for Ward 3, presented the idea to members of the Arkansas Homeless Coalition on Wednesday. The coalition is a group of more than 50 homelessne­ss service providers and advocates who meet monthly.

“I see this as a community adventure to see how it’s working in Albuquerqu­e, how it’s working in other cities,” Wyrick said. “I see this as another tool in our box to help with homelessne­ss.”

The 2017 census of the homeless population in central Arkansas showed there were 990 people living in shelters or outside in Lonoke, Prairie, Pulaski and Saline counties.

The Albuquerqu­e program began in 2015 with a $50,000 budget and paid participan­ts $9 an hour. After a day of work, the homeless were taken back to a center that provides housing, therapy and other support services so they could be connected with help.

Most of the initial money for the program came from donations, and the budget was increased to $181,000 in 2017, according to the city website. Several other cities including Ocean Springs, Miss., Austin, Texas, and Chicago launched similar programs.

“We are still in the infancy stages,” Webb said of the program.

She said she has put in a request with the Clinton School of Public Service to research the cities that have done the project to find out which ones have had the most success and what Little Rock can address.

Webb said the program would achieve city goals establishe­d when Little Rock joined the Internatio­nal Compassion­ate City initiative in August. Communitie­s that join the push set goals to address issues such as poverty, homelessne­ss or under-served children. They then partner with nonprofits and raise funds to achieve those goals.

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