City Highlights Homeless Services
Progress in Implementing Ambitious Five-Year Plan Initiatives
More than 175,000 individuals moved to permanent housing
since 2002
Eighty-six percent of five-year plan
initiatives complete
September 23, 2008–New York City Department of Homeless
Services Commissioner Robert V. Hess today released a comprehensive report
detailing significant progress in reducing street homelessness and homelessness
among single adults and major transformations to the homeless system through the
City’s five-year action plan, Uniting For Solutions Beyond Shelter. More
than 175,000 individuals—including men, women, and children—have moved to
permanent housing under the Bloomberg administration.
"Innovative approaches and transformation of past
practices have led to a system reformed, and the ambitious census reduction
goals set forth in the plan demand even more progress," said Commissioner
Hess. "Eighty-six percent of the initiatives outlined in the plan are
complete and we remain committed to doing whatever necessary to help as many
people as possible in overcoming homelessness or preventing it in the first
place."
"The goals of reducing homelessness by two-thirds were
only one part of the plan," said Lilliam Barrios-Paoli, co-chair of the
Five-Year Plan Committee and CEO of Safe Space. "There were many other
findings about what the City needed to do, and what they have accomplished in
just four years is tremendous. When you look at the full picture, DHS and
the City are moving in the right direction."
The five-year plan outlined major changes needed to
improve the adult and families systems, including the addition of prevention
services, which prior to the Bloomberg administration was not part of DHS’
work. DHS' efforts have led to undeniable progress in reducing
homelessness among single adults, particularly in outreach to the chronically
homeless. Since the baseline of the five-year plan in 2004, the number of adults
living in shelter has dropped by 22 percent and the number of street homeless
individuals has been reduced 25 percent. Outreach to individuals on the street
has been revamped, and the Street to Home program now operates 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, in all five boroughs. More than 850 individuals have moved
from street to housing since the program’s inception last fall, and outreach
teams are currently working with an additional 900 chronic street homeless
individuals with the goal of moving to permanent housing. Outreach
services are tailored in order to be most accepted by those chronically street
homeless individuals who are resistant to the traditional shelter system by
offering lower threshold housing. Over the past year and a half, 300 of
these Safe Haven beds have been developed, with the goal of 500 online by year
end.
While the families system faces challenges, a three
percent reduction in adult families and a two percent reduction in families with
children have resulted from the five-year plan. Most recently, numbers have been
increasingly promising, with a 19 percent decrease in the past year of adult
families in shelter on an average night, and from October 2007, to August 2008,
a five percent decrease in families with children sleeping in shelter. In
spite of recent spikes in demand, the framework put in place by DHS has
withstood the test, with families continuing to be effectively and humanely
served.
One of the major
accomplishments of the five-year plan has been the transformation of the family
intake system – the success of which brought an end to 25 years of litigation
and court oversight. At the beginning of the Administration, homeless
families faced an overcrowded and chaotic intake center. In the past, 150
families were forced to spend the night in chairs or on the floor at the family
intake center. Today, at the PATH center, which opened in November 2004,
no family is forced to wait overnight in uncomfortable conditions while in
search of shelter. While the intake processing time in 2003 was roughly 20 hours
per family over multiple days, the application process, today, is completed in
one business day. Intensive support and services are available to clients
throughout the application process and multiple safeguards like fair hearings
are in place to ensure thorough and fair review of each family's application for
shelter.
DHS has created and expanded homeless prevention
services to never before seen levels. Beginning in 2004, the Homebase program
started in six high-need communities, and after much success, expanded citywide.
Since its implementation, providers have assisted 9,500 families in avoiding
shelter and nine out of 10 clients receiving Homebase services successfully
maintain housing in the community for more than a year.
In 2007 DHS launched Advantage New York, the most
generous municipal rental assistance program in the nation. A year after its
implementation, more than 5,000 families and individuals moved from shelter to
permanent homes of their own. Of those continuing with the program, 88 percent
remain employed, working an average of 35 hours per week. With a City-matched
savings program, families are able to create a "rainy day fund", on average
putting aside $500 in the first year.
Other initiatives in the five-year plan included efforts
to coordinate city services, minimize disruptions to families who experience
homelessness, minimize the duration of homelessness, and measure progress and
evaluate success.
To find out more, download a copy of "
A Progress Report on Uniting for Solutions Beyond Shelter:
The Action Plan for New York City, Fall 2008.
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