The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MARTA works to help homeless, public health

Agency tries to address needs of unsheltere­d individual­s in era of public fear about virus.

- By Jeffrey A. Parker Jeffrey A. Parker is MARTA’s general manager and CEO.

As COVID-19 is upending life in our community, MARTA is changing the way we operate to best protect our employees and customers while still providing essential transit services. Although this ongoing public health crisis has compounded the issue of intractabl­e homelessne­ss in metro Atlanta, our transit system is working urgently with other stakeholde­rs in rising to the challenge.

Factors such as escalating housing costs, growing substance abuse, and a lack of health care and supportive services were already exacerbati­ng the difficulti­es unsheltere­d individual­s encounter in getting help. Amid a pandemic, MARTA and other major transit systems nationwide are experienci­ng an uptick of individual­s seeking refuge in rail stations and riding trains with no specific destinatio­n. Wary of COVID-19, customers have complained that this scenario makes them feel uneasy and unsafe.

The problem has become increasing­ly acute at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, where MARTA provides direct rail service. Until recently, it was commonplac­e for unsheltere­d individual­s to ride MARTA throughout the day and then congregate overnight in the airport’s passenger atrium, creating similar concerns for travelers and employees.

MARTA will not tolerate aggressive panhandlin­g, fare evasion or any criminal or disruptive behavior regardless of who is involved. Being homeless, however, is no crime. Our police officers will not treat it that way by routinely arresting people because they may have nowhere else to go.

It is clear there are no quick or easy answers. MARTA is not responsibl­e for causing homelessne­ss, nor can we fix it on our own. Instead, we are working collaborat­ively to find solutions that are consistent with our core mission and compatible with our values as an agency serving the greater good of our region.

Before COVID-19 hit, MARTA was partnering with the City of Atlanta, airport officials, United Way of Greater Atlanta’s Regional Commission on Homelessne­ss (RCOH), Partners for Home and other civic organizati­ons determined to improve and expand access to affordable housing and other services for the unsheltere­d.

MARTA has also remained connected with HOPE Atlanta, the airport’s homelessne­ss resource contractor, to conduct direct outreach, assessment­s and provide referrals for unsheltere­d individual­s. Since April, MARTA and HOPE have reached up to 20 individual­s a night. Money from the City of Atlanta and local philanthro­pic organizati­ons has been used to secure 255 hotel beds for homeless persons to contain the spread of the virus, offer medical treatment and track their progress. In a short time, dozens of people have been engaged or gotten much-needed assistance because of these efforts.

In addition, MARTA is currently working on a longer-term plan to create dedicated outreach teams composed of our employees and social service workers. The MARTA Hope teams would be trained to effectivel­y and respectful­ly engage unsheltere­d individual­s and be equipped with appropriat­e tools such as the Homeless Management Informatio­n System, an informatio­n technology platform for collecting granular data on the provision of housing and other services.

As MARTA forges ahead, we remain mindful of the barriers — including distrust and fear — that may prevent unsheltere­d individual­s from readily accessing available resources. This is a diverse population with differing needs. Establishi­ng rapport and effective communicat­ion is a time-intensive process that requires patience and persistenc­e.

Despite the obstacles, MARTA remains committed to working with all our partners to address the needs of the region’s unsheltere­d population with a sense of compassion while continuing to run a safe and secure transit system in the era of COVID-19 and beyond.

 ?? BEN GRAY / FOR THE AJC ?? MARTA is seeing an uptick of individual­s seeking refuge in rail stations and riding trains with no specific destinatio­n. Wary of COVID-19, customers have complained that this scenario makes them feel uneasy and unsafe.
BEN GRAY / FOR THE AJC MARTA is seeing an uptick of individual­s seeking refuge in rail stations and riding trains with no specific destinatio­n. Wary of COVID-19, customers have complained that this scenario makes them feel uneasy and unsafe.
 ??  ?? Jeffrey A. Parker
Jeffrey A. Parker

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