Churches told not to shelter homeless

By The Associated Press

Saturday, November 22, 2008 11:39 PM EST

NEW YORK - Twenty-two churches have stopped providing shelter to homeless New Yorkers - on city orders.
With temperatures below freezing on Saturday, the churches had to follow a city rule requiring faith-based shelters to be open at least five days a week - or not at all.

Arnold Cohen, president of the Partnership for the Homeless, a nonprofit that serves as a link between city officials and shelters, delivered the news to the churches several weeks ago that that they no longer qualify.

As a result, hundreds of people now won't have a place to sleep, he said.

The city's emergency shelter network contract requires sites to operate at least five nights a week. The 22 churches have limited resources, since they operate their homeless beds using mostly volunteers.

On Saturday, the city Department of Homeless Services said there is plenty of space at other shelters to accept all those who have been sleeping in the churches.

The spaces include four new faith-based sites where the number of beds combined with availability amounts to a greater total number of nights for people to stay, said Homeless Services spokeswoman Heather J. Janik.

There are now about 250 beds in churches, mosques and synagogues.

They're close to drop-in centers where people receive other services including food, Janik said.

“This city is investing more than ever to make sure people have a place to lay their heads at night,” she said, adding that the number of faith-based and other types of shelter beds will increase by 50 percent in the next fiscal year to more than 1,000.

On Saturday, the city was under its Code Blue Cold Weather Emergency Procedure that takes effect when temperatures drop below freezing. About three dozen outreach teams in vans were ready to respond around the clock to reports of homeless people outdoors or in the subways. Police and Department of Parks teams also perform homeless outreach.

New Yorkers are asked to call the 311 city hot line when they see homeless people. They may request a callback if they'd like to know what action was taken.

Patrick Markee of the Coalition for the Homeless nonprofit advocacy group disputed the city figures showing an increase in beds. He said the city proposes to close down the drop-in shelters overnight.

“That's a net loss,” he said, adding, “However you cut it, there will be less shelter for the street homeless at a time when the economic downturn is causing more homelessness.”

Janik said drop-in centers provide only “folding chairs,” not beds.

“That's unacceptable and we think there are better programs and ways,” she said.

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