Trump’s Budget Cuts Deeply Into Medicaid and Anti-Poverty Efforts Posted on May 22, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone in The New York Times President Trump plans to unveil on Tuesday a $4.1 trillion budget for 2018 that would cut deeply into programs for the poor, from health care and food stamps to student loans and disability payments, laying out an austere vision for reordering the nation’s p ..Read More
Under Settlement, City Shelters Will Do More for the Disabled Posted on May 18, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone in The New York Times New York City’s homeless services agency, under a settlement reached this week, has agreed to do more to accommodate homeless people who are disabled. The Center for Independence of the Disabled, one of the groups that filed the class-action lawsuit, counts ..Read More
Stresses of Shelter Life Rip Homeless Families Apart, Study Finds Posted on May 16, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone in DNAinfo A record 23,000 children — nearly half of whom are under 6 — are now living in the city’s shelter system, and more often than not, their families are placed in shelters far from their communities, according to a new report from the Center for New Yor ..Read More
City Council Introduces Resolution Calling for Home Stability Support Posted on May 16, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone Thousands of New Yorkers struggle to pay rent each month, and the affordability crisis is particularly challenging for households receiving public assistance benefits. An estimated two-thirds of public assistance households living in private housing statewide ..Read More
Experts Discuss Causes of and Solutions to Record Homelessness Posted on May 12, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone On April 4th, a panel of experts discussed Homelessness and Housing in New York State as part of the Warren M. Anderson Legislative Breakfast Series sponsored by the Government Law Center at Albany Law School. Shelly Nortz, the Coalition’s Deputy Executive D ..Read More
Fair Share Bills Are NOT Fair to Homeless New Yorkers Posted on May 11, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone The citywide affordable housing crisis has pushed record numbers of New Yorkers into homelessness. In an effort to meet its moral and legal obligation to provide shelter for all homeless individuals and families, the City has scrambled to open more shelters to ..Read More
Today’s Read: Why Is the Homeless Crisis Growing? Posted on May 10, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone A combination of economic forces and misguided policy responses has pushed record numbers of men, women, and children into homelessness – leaving the City struggling to address the crisis. Although Mayor de Blasio has made notable improvements in some areas, ..Read More
A Fresh Take on Ending the Jail-to-Street-to-Jail Cycle Posted on May 10, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone in The Marshall Project George Washington (not the famous one) first ended up in a New York homeless shelter in the mid-1980s, after he came home from prison for robbery and crack cocaine hit the streets. Since then, he’s passed between girlfriends’ houses, hotels, shelters all o ..Read More
New York’s Mayor Vowed to Help the Homeless. Why Is the Crisis Growing? Posted on May 9, 2017 by Jacquelyn Simone in The Nation No one really knows how many homeless people there are in New York City, and no one ever has. The city’s official “daily census” tallies the population in the homeless-shelter system, but fails to count thousands of other New Yorkers living under borrowe ..Read More