Opinion: Don’t erode NYC’s right to shelter: The migrant crisis is no excuse to retreat on providing for the homeless

Originally published in the New York Daily News

On May 23, Eric Adams announced his intent to challenge New York City’s bedrock right to shelter as it applies to homeless single adults and families without minor children, threatening to upend a protection that, over the years, has saved hundreds of thousands of people from having to sleep on the streets. The mayor’s basic argument is that the city could never have foreseen the rapid increase in need for emergency shelter beds fueled by the influx of asylum seekers, that the city is out of resources, and that the lack of resources should trigger relief from the legal obligation to provide emergency shelter beds for people in need.

The reality is that Mayor Adams failed to plan for what was already an increasing shelter census, ignored the ongoing crisis of mass homelessness that has kept tens of thousands of New Yorkers stranded in shelters, and has consistently refused to take measures to create more shelter capacity by helping people move into housing.