Today’s Video: Homelessness in New York City

With more than 62,000 New Yorkers sleeping in shelters each night and thousands more on the streets, we urgently need bold solutions to address the homelessness crisis. Coalition for the Homeless Policy Director Giselle Routhier recently sat down with Sheryl McCarthy on CUNY TV’s One to One program. They discussed the ways in which the lack of affordable housing has fueled record homelessness, and the need to muster the political will to address homelessness by fully utilizing all available housing resources.

Giselle emphasized the Coalition’s  House Our Future NY campaign calling on Mayor de Blasio to increase the number of permanent affordable housing units set aside for homeless New Yorkers to 30,000 of his 300,000-unit Housing New York 2.0 plan, with 24,000 of those units to be created through new construction. The campaign has already been endorsed by 57 organizations and 38 elected officials. Please add your voice by signing the House Our Future NY petition.

Giselle explained:

“We’ve put forward a plan to push the Mayor to create 30,000 units of affordable housing specifically for people that are currently homeless, but we want 24,000 of those units to be new construction. … If we’re going to reduce the homelessness crisis in New York City, we’re going to need 10 percent of his plan to be specifically set aside units for homeless households, and the majority of those units – 24,000 – to be new construction so that people can move out of shelters and into those units immediately.”

“What’s critical about this opportunity that we have now under Mayor de Blasio and his commitment that he’s made toward affordable housing is that he’s put all this money toward it, he’s created this Housing New York plan, but if he shifted it such that it was actually tailored to where the need is the greatest – so that’s homeless households, people at 30 percent of AMI – he could actually make a meaningful reduction in the shelter census and start to turn that curve, and then we’d start to be spending less and less on shelters and you could reinvest that money in more affordable housing and start on a track where you’re actually moving in the direction that we want to be moving in.”

Watch the full interview here.