Alliance Alert: The Brooklyn Paper recently published an important interview with Taina Martinez-Laing, CEO of Alliance member organization Baltic Street Wellness Solutions, who is also an Alliance Board Member and former Board President. In the piece, Martinez-Laing powerfully rejects the Trump Administration鈥檚 recent executive order that promotes involuntary hospitalization, criminalizes homelessness, and calls for defunding proven Housing First programs.
The Alliance stands firmly with Taina and Baltic Street in stating that this executive order moves our nation in the wrong direction. History has shown that homeless sweeps and forced institutionalization do nothing but hide people from view, fail to address root causes, and deepen trauma. Instead, we must:
- Increase access to voluntary, community-based services that meet people where they are and support recovery on their own terms.
- Fund more Housing First programs, following the evidence-based model developed by Dr. Sam Tsemberis, which provides immediate, permanent housing without preconditions and connects people to the supports they choose.
- Double our investment in harm reduction, which is proven to save lives, improve health outcomes, strengthen communities, and support long term recovery.
Baltic Street鈥檚 peer-led, trauma-informed work鈥攂uilt on dignity, choice, and empowerment鈥攄emonstrates what actually works to address homelessness and support mental health recovery. These are the approaches that should be expanded, not undermined.
The Alliance will be hosting multiple workshops and keynote sessions at our upcoming Annual Conference to address recent federal policy changes and funding threats. These sessions will feature national leaders, members of Congress, and former government officials alongside advocates, providers, and policymakers, focusing on how our field can respond effectively while ensuring that critical services are protected and expanded. See registration information below and continue monitoring this enews for additional details on the conference program.
Unbreakable! Harnessing Our Power, Building Our Resilience, Inspiring Hope and Courage
Alliance for Rights and Recovery 43rd聽Annual Conference
Villa Roma Resort and Conference Center | September 29-October 1, 2025
Register Today
We encourage everyone to read the full article and join us in continuing to push for policies rooted in compassion, evidence, and human rights. See below.
Brooklyn Mental Health Advocates Push Back on Trump鈥檚 Executive Order Targeting Homelessness
By Gabriele Holtermann | Brooklyn Paper | August 11, 2025
Local mental health advocates say a new executive order allowing homeless people to be forcibly removed from streets and hospitalized against their will is a 鈥渄angerous regression鈥 that would violate people鈥檚 rights and threaten the work of organizations that support mentally ill and homeless individuals.
On July 24, President Donald Trump signed an executive order titled 鈥,鈥 giving state and local governments the authority to involuntarily hospitalize unsheltered people to confront 鈥渆ndemic vagrancy, disorderly behavior, sudden confrontations, and violent attacks鈥 that, as Trump claims, have made cities 鈥渦nsafe.鈥
The order also directs defunding 鈥淗ousing First鈥 policies, which offer permanent housing to people with a history of chronic homelessness without first requiring them to enter shelter or graduate through a series of programs or services. Instead, the money will be directed to states and cities that 鈥渆nforce prohibitions on open illicit drug use, urban camping and loitering,鈥 the White House said.
About 771,800 people experienced homelessness in the U.S. in 2024. The and advocacy organizations for the unsheltered with mental health disabilities or substance use disorder, among them Baltic Street Wellness Solution, have denounced Trump鈥檚 new policy, saying it criminalizes homelessness, undermines civil liberties, and diverts support from proven solutions for homelessness.
Brooklyn-based 黑料正能量 state鈥檚 largest peer-led mental health organization, provides person-centered and trauma-informed services, assists individuals with mental health diagnoses and substance use disorder. Baltic Street鈥檚 programs have helped veterans find stable housing after years of street homelessness and supported hundreds to rebuild their lives through empowerment.
Its CEO, Taina Martinez-Laing, said that the organization firmly rejects the executive order, which 鈥減romotes involuntary civil commitment and coercive behavioral health policies,鈥 pointing out that Baltic Street鈥檚 programs have helped veterans find stable housing after years of street homelessness and empowered hundreds to rebuild their lives through empowerment, connection, community, and care, and not through institutionalization.
鈥淭his sweeping mandate, which proposes punitive responses to homelessness and lived mental health experiences under the guise of public safety, is a dangerous regression into systems of surveillance, forced institutionalization, and the criminalization of vulnerability,鈥 Martinez wrote in a statement to Brooklyn Paper. 鈥淲e are not merely adapting, we are organizing, resisting, and reaffirming our commitment to justice, dignity, and the healing power of peer-led, community-rooted care.鈥

The says that homelessness in 黑料正能量 City has reached the highest level since the Great Depression of the 1930s. The organization estimates that more than 300,000 黑料正能量ers were without a home in June 2025. One hundred five thousand three hundred seventy-three people slept in 黑料正能量 City shelters each night, with thousands more sleeping unsheltered in public spaces. Over 200,000 黑料正能量ers slept temporarily doubled up in the homes of others.
In 2022, Mayor Eric Adams moved to from 黑料正能量 City streets, sending police and sanitation workers to throw out tents and personal belongings while urging homeless people to move into permanent shelter. The city swept dozens of encampments and removed more than 2,000 people from the streets that year, but a found that very few of those people found long-term support in city shelters or permanent housing.
Last fall, a that the city had violated its own policies during those sweeps by failing to provide advanced and throwing away personal items without storing them for the required 90 days. Several plaintiffs in that suit said they were only offered a ride to a drop-in shelter, not long-term housing assistance or shelter.
Baltic Street is ramping up its efforts to assist the most vulnerable population, including people living with mental health challenges, Black and Brown communities, people in recovery, and unhoused individuals, by mobilizing across the city, state, and federal levels to defend harm reduction, 鈥淗ousing First,鈥 and community-based alternatives to forced treatment.
鈥淲e are expanding our trauma-informed wellness hubs and street outreach, led by those with lived experience. We meet people where they are voluntarily, compassionately, and without judgment. Recovery cannot be coerced,鈥 Martinez said. 鈥淥ur voices will be heard from Albany to D.C.鈥
Martinez elaborated that the organization will protect its clients by implementing safeguards to prevent any unnecessary surveillance or forced interventions within their programs and support legislation that codifies voluntary mental health care, decriminalization of poverty, and protection for harm reduction practices.
The organization also calls on local and state leaders to pass laws that uphold the rights of individuals, reject any enforcement or funding of EO provisions that promote surveillance, forced treatment, or displacement, and protect local resources, like shielding city and state funding for peer services, voluntary care, and housing as a human right.
In the meantime, Baltic Street is collaborating with organizations such as Alliance for Rights and Recovery, VOCAL-NY, RiseWell, InUnity, Housing Works, and other grassroots allies to fight the EO by sharing resources and training, launching coordinated advocacy campaigns, and developing unified policy platforms to challenge coercive laws.
鈥淭his Executive Order is a betrayal of every person who has fought for justice in behavioral health. It resurrects a legacy of forced confinement, systemic racism, and state-sanctioned trauma,鈥 Martinez said.
The commander in chief is swiftly turning his EO into motion. At a press briefing on Aug. 11, Trump declared a public safety emergency for Washington, D.C., and announced he is placing the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department under federal control, invoking the District of Columbia Home Rule Act. He also announced the deployment of the National Guard to 鈥渉elp re-establish law and order and public safety鈥 and 鈥渞escue the nation鈥檚 capital from crime, bloodshed, Bedlam, and squalor and worse.鈥
Despite the latest which show that overall violent crime in the capital dropped by 26% in 2024, homicide fell by 12%, and robbery by 28%, Trump claimed that the capital had been 鈥渙vertaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs, and homeless people,鈥 vowing also to get rid of homeless encampments.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to let it happen anymore,鈥 Trump said. 鈥淸D.C.] is becoming a situation of complete and total lawlessness, and we get rid of the slums, too. We have slums here. We鈥檙e getting rid of them.鈥
While Trump painted a picture of rising crime and disorder, Mayor Adams鈥 office pointed to record-low crime rates in 黑料正能量 City.
Adams鈥 press secretary, Kayla Mamelak Altus, told the Brooklyn Paper in a statement that under the mayor鈥檚 leadership, crime has continued to decline. She said July saw the lowest number of shootings, shooting victims and subway crimes in recorded history, while other violent crimes 鈥 including homicides, robberies, felony assaults, burglaries and grand larcenies 鈥 were also down.
鈥淪imply put, while we are always open to working with our federal law enforcement partners to continue driving down crime, 黑料正能量 City, under Mayor Adams鈥 and NYPD Commissioner Tisch鈥檚 leadership, continues to be the safest big city in America,鈥 Mamelak Altus said.
Update (Aug. 12, 9:46 a.m.) This story has been updated with comment from City Hall.