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Tuesday, Feb 22 2022

Full Issue

Cities Try To Tackle Homelessness Conditions Made Worse By Pandemic

New York City says it will try to offer support for the people now barred from sleeping in the subway system. Los Angeles resumes its count of people without housing. In Sacramento, vulnerable people say there is not enough access to bathrooms and water to keep them safe from covid.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams is making an aggressive push to try to remove homeless people from the city鈥檚 sprawling subway system, announcing a plan to start barring people from sleeping on trains or riding the same lines all night. The new mayor, at one point likening homelessness to a 鈥渃ancerous sore,鈥 said Friday that the city next week would deploy more teams of police officers and mental health workers to the transit network and start enforcing rules more strictly. (02/19)

New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Friday announced a plan to remove New Yorkers without homes and those suffering from mental illness from transit stations, sending response teams into the subways to help them. The teams will connect people in need with housing and other support and take them to drop-in centers. The city will add NYPD officers, who Adams said 鈥渨ill enforce transit rules鈥 prohibiting smoking, open drug use, fare evasion and sleeping on trains. Officials will also launch a marketing campaign that directs everyday riders to text or Whatsapp the MTA to report people in need. (Nahmias, 2/18)

After a yearlong hiatus during the pandemic, thousands of volunteers will fan out across Los Angeles County this week to conduct the annual count of the region鈥檚 homeless population. The Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority canceled the event last year and then delayed it last month because of COVID-19 surges spawned by the Delta and Omicron variants of the coronavirus. (Vives, 2/21)

Currently, Sacramento County has 37 portable toilets available for an estimated 10,000 homeless people. That鈥檚 about 270 people per port-a-potty. They could be removed in June when funding for their upkeep runs out, said county spokeswoman Kim Nava. The county鈥檚 portable toilet program is fairly new. It dates to the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, when officials put out 50 port-a-potties near homeless camps. Thirteen have been removed since then. The county also put out 50 water stations, but has so far removed 21. Some of the toilets and water stations were damaged or went missing, and the county did not replace them. (Clift, 2/21)

Wisconsin in 2020 had an estimated 4,515 people experiencing homelessness, according to the most recent available data. In 2021, the Brown County Health and Human Services Department served 175 people who identified as homeless. For the housed, homelessness may seem foreign 鈥 something that could never happen to them. But all people experiencing homelessness have one thing in common. (Graves, 2/19)

It was after several winters of sheltering the homeless men at night and learning they were increasingly stumbling around in the snow by day 鈥斅爏ometimes sleeping out in it 鈥斅爐hat the plight of Jim and Gary came dramatically to Elizabeth Kelly鈥檚 attention. As their conditions deteriorated, Jim and Gary had been in and out of Pontiac鈥檚 main hospital, at that time聽called POH Medical Center. They first had their frozen toes thawed, next聽amputated one by one, followed by amputations of entire feet, and聽then ultimately came their pitiful deaths. (Laitner, 2/21)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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