Harsh
Winter Means Homeless Emergency
There is a
human rights emergency in the City of Worcester. The so-called homeless are suffering in the
more than 600 hours of continuous temperatures below freezing. The City Council’s
Committee on Public Health, chaired by Councillor Sarai Rivera, held hearings
on the matter on February 23, 2015.
The Triage Center,
located on Queen St., has exceeded its capacity daily because of the extreme
cold and snow. It is licensed for 25 beds but some nights over one hundred
people spend the night. This number is not representative of the number of
people who need shelter as many people do not meet the criteria of the Triage Center
or choose to remain outdoors. One person
who attended the meeting, Paul, said that the staff of the Triage Center was
sometimes confused about the requirements.
The number
of people sheltering in the Triage Center has brought complaints from the
Shepherd/ King St. Neighborhood Association which was represented by former
City Councillor Barbara Haller. Ms. Haller and I have locked horns before on
numerous issues, but in this case I think she is right despite her
motives. She said that the Triage Center
was never intended to shelter over one hundred people on a daily basis. Forty
people were acceptable, albeit a number exceeding the Center’s license for 25
beds. The old PIP Shelter had 37
residents when it closed its doors and was replaced by the Triage Center.
South
Middlesex Opportunity Council (SMOC) runs the Triage Center on the campus of
Community Healthlink, a part of UMass Hospital. The SMOC representative,
Charles Gagnon, detailed the efforts it was making to reduce the “overflow” of
people to the Triage Center. He said that the goal was to develop a single
point of entry for the people needing shelter; this is the vision developed by
the Federal agency, Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Through HUD SMOC has
50 units of housing, 100 vouchers for housing and 15 housing slots. SMOC said
it was looking at a long term solution of moving homeless people into housing.
Mr. Gagnon also
said that the harsh winter, the closure of the Long Island Center in Boston,
and the periodic mercy patrols by the Worcester Police have a part to play in
the overcrowding. Although he admitted he should have included the City and the
neighbors sooner in the discussion of the overcrowding he felt at the time the
extreme weather and demand on the Triage Center would subside.
Councillor Rivera said that the system is
broken. Mary Keefe, the District’s State Representative said that she was just
learning of the issue. Hopefully
Representative Keefe will come up with a strategy that the City can take to the
State.
Councillor
Rivera is right in that the system is broken. There does not seem to be the
political will to resolve the underlying causes that make people “homeless”: an economic system in which we live from check
to check, a devastated safety net, the health issues of the homelessness, and
the prejudice against even the sight of homeless and “panhandlers”.
Although not
a surprise it is a disappointment that more people, politicians, and candidates
did come to the hearing. I suppose a human rights crisis does not matter when
the people cannot vote or contribute to a campaign.
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