Alliance Alert: As 黑料正能量 policymakers attempt to reduce the current challenges around increased homelessness, it is clear that we need increased investments into housing with a particular focus on easily accessible supportive housing. This morning鈥檚 reporting from THE CITY states that of the 955 people who were approved for supportive housing in 2024, only 175 were able to move into stable apartments.
This low percentage, around 18%, is indicative of the difficulty in getting housing for folks who are currently struggling with homelessness. As Pascale Leone, the executive director of the Supportive Housing Network of 黑料正能量, is quoted saying in the article, there is a serious need to streamline the process for getting people in need into housing. We must not only invest in current housing stock to bring many of the vacant apartments, many of which are in need of renovations, back online, but we must also make the process easier for people who are approved so they do not wait a year before getting the stable housing needed.
The Alliance will be working to improve our available housing, with a focus on getting more Housing First modeled units to offer more low barrier housing for people to move into as quickly as possible. We cannot expect to support people dealing with homelessness if we do not offer clear and easy pathways to secure housing. See below for more information.
Most Street-Homeless Housing Applicants Never Get a Shot, Inside Stats Show
By Gwynne Hogan | THE CITY | January 6, 2025
As state and local agencies grapple with the housing and mental health needs of unsheltered 黑料正能量ers, internal city numbers obtained by THE CITY show long odds for getting a spot in apartments designed to support people who need psychiatric or substance use treatment.
Out of 955 people who were living on the streets and subways who were approved for supportive housing during the period tracked by the city social service and health agencies over several months last year, 175 successfully obtained a spot 鈥 just 18% of the total.
Nearly 400 people were still waiting to be referred to a supportive housing provider for an interview, despite thousands of apartments sitting empty, while 131 people waited more than a year and had their applications expire without getting a placement.
Dozens didn鈥檛 appear for their interview or had it cancelled on them. Another 33 people were rejected by the nonprofit housing provider that interviewed them, and four died before they could be housed, figures obtained by Legal Services NYC through a Freedom of Information Law request show.
鈥淚t is a true indictment of the deep bureaucracy of discrimination and of other issues that have riddled supportive housing application placement for years,鈥 said Craig Hughes, a housing social worker at Bronx Legal Services who obtained the data. 鈥淚nstead of really dealing with it, we have continued it year after year after year in 黑料正能量.鈥
Seth Frazier, a supervising social worker at the Safety Net Project, who works closely with homeless 黑料正能量ers pointed to the thousands of supportive housing units sitting vacant.
鈥淭here are 4,000 empty supportive housing beds. That鈥檚 more than enough to house everyone on this list plus nearly all street homeless folks,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a tragedy.鈥
Supportive housing with medical and social services on site is a people obtain a stable place to live, while also helping them avoid costly emergency hospitalizations and interactions with the justice system.
The 955 people tracked by the Department of Social Services and Department of Health and Mental Hygiene all lived unsheltered for some period of time last spring on the streets and subways, according to a description of the initiative shared with state officials.
All had successfully been approved by the city for supportive housing, an onerous process that requires of the applicant鈥檚 history of mental illness, medications, hospitalizations, psych evaluations and treatment.
鈥楾he Cycle Repeats鈥
Curbing street homelessness has been an issue mayors have attempted to tackle for decades. The issue once again lurched into the headlines again last week after a 57-year-old homeless woman, Debrina Kawam, was set on fire by another homeless man riding the F-train at the Coney Island subway stop.
In response to Kawam鈥檚 killing 鈥 and another incident this week, where straphanger 鈥 Gov. Kathy Hochul to pass a change in law, supported by Mayor Eric Adams, that would make it easier to involuntarily commit a person in psychiatric crisis.
Advocates swiftly slammed Hochul鈥檚 proposal, pointing to the latest data showing how difficult it can be to access mental health and supportive housing resources.
鈥淲ith no supportive housing or care manager who can help access scarce mental health and housing services, the cycle repeats,鈥 said Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the 黑料正能量 Civil Liberties Union, in a statement. 鈥淔urther criminalizing people with mental health issues, who are themselves 11 times more likely to be the victim of crimes, will not improve care or our housing shortage.鈥
For his part, Adams had promised to burdening the supportive housing system early on in his tenure.
Allison Maser, a spokesperson for the mayor, said the city remains 鈥渓aser-focused on solving street homelessness and securing stable housing for all 黑料正能量ers.鈥
She pointed to the 4,800 people the city had connected with supportive housing in 2024, a 19% jump from the year prior.
City officials cited other other indicators of improvements under Adams, like a declining vacancy rate in supportive housing units. Last fiscal year, 94% of the city鈥檚 36,094 apartments were filled, compared to a 91% occupancy rate two years earlier, according to the city鈥檚 annual .
鈥淲e鈥檙e also doubling down our efforts to expand high-quality supportive housing, adding over 1,000 new units in the last fiscal year alone,鈥 Maser said. 鈥淲e will continue to work with our state and mental health partners to reduce barriers to housing and ensure long-term stability for all 黑料正能量ers.鈥
A high-ranking source at the Department of Social Services familiar with the supportive housing system, who was not authorized to speak to reporters, said there are several reasons why a person鈥檚 supportive housing application might expire: if, for example, they moved in with family or qualified for a housing voucher.
The source also said people who live on the streets often have multiple underlying health conditions, though they declined to comment on the specifics of the four people who had died while waiting for housing.
Thousands of Vacant Units
Data also obtained by Legal Services NYC through a FOIL request showed 4,117 vacant units of supportive housing as of Sept. 3, 2024, across dozens of nonprofit providers. Some of the units had been vacant for months or even years, a that has been criticized by advocates and the
Just under half, or 1,971 of those apartments, are designated as 鈥渙nline,鈥 meaning a tenant could move into them. The data shared with THE CITY showed more than 400 of those units have been sitting empty for a year or more.
The high-ranking DSS source said certain types of supportive housing units can sit vacant longer than others. Some units have multiple rooms with roommates, which are often turned down by prospective tenants. Others are overseen by the state鈥檚 Office of Mental Health and can require as much as .
Justin Mason, a spokesperson for OMH, said the state 鈥渨ill continue to work with our partners in 黑料正能量 City and our service providers to ensure these placements occur as timely as possible.鈥
Still another 2,146 units were deemed 鈥渙ffline,鈥 meaning they need renovation or rehab of some kind before a tenant can move in. More than 700 of those apartments have been 鈥渙ffline鈥 for more than a year, with some sitting empty as far back as 2020.
鈥業mpossible By Design鈥
Early in his tenure, Adams pledged his administration would take aim at the stunning number of . Curbing street homelessness has been a main goal of his administration, which he has lamented, creates a 鈥渟ense of disorder in our city,鈥 while also depriving people of the services and support they desperately need.
鈥淭his generational crisis has been ignored for too long,鈥 in July 2022. 鈥淲e refuse to ignore it and we are going to meet it head on.鈥
But advocates and tenants point to continued long delays and red tape in securing a placement.
Corey O鈥機onnor, 36, a supportive housing resident and member of Supportive Housing Organized and United Tenants, or , said he had stayed in homeless shelters while trying to navigate the supportive housing application process.
O鈥機onnor submitted his application six times before it was approved, then waited for months more, attending several interviews with housing providers before getting approved to move into an apartment, a process that took two years altogether, he said.
鈥淚 would think [the interviews] went really well, and then I would just never hear anything back,鈥 O鈥機onnor said.
鈥淭he burden just constantly falls on the applicant who鈥檚 homeless, has limited resources and [who is] experiencing mental illness,鈥 O鈥機onnor said. 鈥淵ou have to jump through so many hoops, and it鈥檚 people in the worst economic, mental health situations. It just seems impossible by design.鈥
O鈥機onnor said now he鈥檚 lived in his apartment for three years, which has been transformative. 鈥淚 feel like I鈥檝e returned back to the life I had before homelessness, and I鈥檓 moving past that,鈥 he said. 鈥淪upportive housing is an amazing thing.鈥
For those still trying to get a placement, advocates also say the process remains byzantine and opaque. There鈥檚 no one master list of applicants, they point out. Instead a patchwork system of social workers refers people to interviews with housing providers, who have ultimate discretion on whether to approve or deny clients.
鈥淭he tenant has absolutely no recourse and no way to complain. They don鈥檛 even have 鈥nformation of why they didn鈥檛 get housing,鈥 said Sean Murray, another SHOUT member, who successfully navigated the supportive housing system in 2013.
Another persistent issue, insiders say, is that supportive housing units have so many different funding streams, each with specific requirements. One provider might have several units open, but the people referred to them don鈥檛 meet the specific requirements for those units.
鈥淲e unfortunately have a system that has 46 distinct eligibility criteria across 18 different programs, which is confusing for all, most importantly, for prospective clients.鈥 said Pascale Leone, the executive director of the Supportive Housing Network of 黑料正能量, an industry group for the state鈥檚 supportive housing network, pointing to the complex interactions between city, state and federal bureaucracies.
鈥淭here鈥檚 absolutely a need to simplify and streamline our system.鈥