NYC's Homeless Population: 50,000

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Homeless Population in NYC Shelters Reaches Record 50,000: Report | NBC New York

I believe it is more.


The number of homeless people sleeping in New York City shelters has risen to a record of more than 50,000 people a night, according to a new report.

The Coalition for the Homeless released the report based on city data Tuesday, which stated that an average of 50,135 people per night slept in shelters in January, including 21,000 children.

The number is a 19 percent jump from a year ago when the population was approximately 42,000, and a 61 percent jump from a decade earlier when the number was under 13,000.

Homeless advocates say Mayor Bloomberg's administration has not done enough to secure housing for homeless families.

"This is a tragedy of City Hall’s own making," said Mary Brosnahan, president of the coalition. "Had Mayor Bloomberg simply followed the strategy of previous mayors of both parties and prioritized moving the homeless into permanent affordable housing, there would be thousands fewer families and children in our shelter system today."

In response to the report, Department of Homeless Services Commissioner Seth Diamond said there are fewer people entering the city's shelter system than years prior, but that people were staying longer.

Diamond blamed the growing population on the loss of state rent subsidies for formerly homeless families two years ago.

"We lost that and the population did go up," Diamond said. "We lost that ability to help them."

The report suggests the city should give homeless families access to federal and city housing resources, including Section 8 and NYCHA public housing. But Diamond contends that federal funding for Section 8 has been "leveled or reduced" in the last three years and that there is now a seven-year waiting period for NYCHA housing.

"The reality is those resources don't exist," Diamond said.
 

Bud Bundy

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not bad considering the number of people living there.
 
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not bad considering the number of people living there.

Again I think the stats are lower than the real numbers. It's really only showing the numbers of people in homeless shelters and not the ones who have been turned away or live in homeless communities( aka under by ways and under bridges and in tunnels).
 

Mr. Somebody

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Homeless Population in NYC Shelters Reaches Record 50,000: Report | NBC New York

I believe it is more.


The number of homeless people sleeping in New York City shelters has risen to a record of more than 50,000 people a night, according to a new report.

The Coalition for the Homeless released the report based on city data Tuesday, which stated that an average of 50,135 people per night slept in shelters in January, including 21,000 children.

The number is a 19 percent jump from a year ago when the population was approximately 42,000, and a 61 percent jump from a decade earlier when the number was under 13,000.

Homeless advocates say Mayor Bloomberg's administration has not done enough to secure housing for homeless families.

"This is a tragedy of City Hall’s own making," said Mary Brosnahan, president of the coalition. "Had Mayor Bloomberg simply followed the strategy of previous mayors of both parties and prioritized moving the homeless into permanent affordable housing, there would be thousands fewer families and children in our shelter system today."

In response to the report, Department of Homeless Services Commissioner Seth Diamond said there are fewer people entering the city's shelter system than years prior, but that people were staying longer.

Diamond blamed the growing population on the loss of state rent subsidies for formerly homeless families two years ago.

"We lost that and the population did go up," Diamond said. "We lost that ability to help them."

The report suggests the city should give homeless families access to federal and city housing resources, including Section 8 and NYCHA public housing. But Diamond contends that federal funding for Section 8 has been "leveled or reduced" in the last three years and that there is now a seven-year waiting period for NYCHA housing.

"The reality is those resources don't exist," Diamond said.
New York City
On June 22, 2010, the New York City Department of Homeless Services reported that the sheltered homeless population consisted of:[122]
250,000 families with children
300,000 adult families
450,000 single adults
1,000,000 total individuals

According to wikipedia 3 years ago. Where did they all go?
 

Mr. Somebody

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NYCShelterPopulation012013.JPG
 

Dafunkdoc_Unlimited

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Bud Bundy said:
not bad considering the number of people living there.

That's actually deplorable considering how much funding NY receives for Health and Human Services. Also.....

Basic Facts About Homelessness:* New York City Data and Charts | Coalition for the Homeless

For the most part, the Coalition reports on the number of homeless adults and children residing in the municipal shelter system, which is primarily administered by the NYC Department of Homeless Services. This does not include data about homeless people residing in other public and private shelters including: families and individuals residing in domestic violence shelters; runaway and homeless youth residing in youth shelters; homeless people living with AIDS residing in special emergency housing; homeless people residing in faith-based shelters; and homeless people sleeping overnight in drop-in centers. Our reports focus on the municipal shelter system because data for that system is historically consistent over three decades. Moreover, the large majority of homeless New Yorkers in public and private shelters -- approximately nine out of ten -- reside in the municipal shelter system.

While there is accurate data on the sheltered homeless population, there is no reliable measurement of the unsheltered homeless population in New York City. The City of New York, under a mandate from the Federal government, produces an annual estimate of the unsheltered homeless population based on a single winter night's survey. The City's controversial estimate has been criticized by advocates and academic researchers as a signficant undercount of the actual number of unsheltered homeless New Yorkers.

What is not written here is that you can only reside in municipal shelters for a limited time (avg. ~1 mo.) so the numbers fluctuate since many homeless people actually have to utilize several different shelters. I'm willing to bet the actual homeless population is 2-3 times higher than reported.

This article goes into a lot more detail about the problem of counting the actual number of homeless people.....

Undercounting the Homeless 2010 | Coalition for the Homeless
 
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New York City
On June 22, 2010, the New York City Department of Homeless Services reported that the sheltered homeless population consisted of:[122]
250,000 families with children
300,000 adult families
450,000 single adults
1,000,000 total individuals

According to wikipedia 3 years ago. Where did they all go?

Swept under the rug...it's Bloomberg remember?
 

bzb

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can't help people that don't want to be helped. also consider many homeless people choose to be homeless. then there's the epidemic of mental health issues among the homeless.

i live in atl and the homeless people here are a scourge on the city. aggressive panhandling and the city's inability to do something about it hurts the local economy and the nightlife.
 
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can't help people that don't want to be helped. also consider many homeless people choose to be homeless.

Myth

then there's the epidemic of mental health issues among the homeless.

That isn't a choice when you have mental issues. :youngsabo:


i live in atl and the homeless people here are a scourge on the city. aggressive panhandling and the city's inability to do something about it hurts the local economy and the nightlife.

Ignoring the continuous population of homeless shows ignorance of your city and the population.
 

bzb

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myth? proof of people not being homeless by choice. do you have it?

metal health issues aren't a choice. but then again you can't make people get the help they need.

ignorance? addressing an issue that requires resources (money) when they're laying off police, firemen, teachers, closing schools, and reducing the budget isn't exactly a sign of ignorance. priorities maybe, but not ignorance.
 

AVXL

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Of course the ATL
can't help people that don't want to be helped. also consider many homeless people choose to be homeless. then there's the epidemic of mental health issues among the homeless.

i live in atl and the homeless people here are a scourge on the city. aggressive panhandling and the city's inability to do something about it hurts the local economy and the nightlife.

It depends how you look at it. Our homeless population is a complex issue when you consider the radical growth & change in the city since the 96 Olympics. Consider that all the federally funded housing projects in the city are gone now, urban gentrification & a shaky housing market and that's a recipe for a homeless problem.

It's deeper than drugs, mental issues or people just wanting to live outside of society. It's a REAL problem here affecting thousands of people...SMH @ saying its a scourge to nightlife here. Most of the clubs in Atlanta either aren't in ATL or are far away from downtown where most if not all the homeless in ATL are at.
 

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bzb said:
can't help people that don't want to be helped.

You could a while ago before the ACLU brought a case before the Supreme Court that pretty much decided that if people wanted to live on the street, it was their right to do so.

bzb said:
also consider many homeless people choose to be homeless.

That's a lie. They don't choose to be homeless, they just can't live with 'normal' people......unless you wouldn't mind living next-door to an alcoholic pedophile that killed his mother when he was 10.

bzb said:
then there's the epidemic of mental health issues among the homeless.

Ever seen the movie 'One Flew Over the Cuckoos' Nest'? That's when the ACLU got involved and had all the mental institutions shut down and got the legislation rolling that allowed psychotic individuals the 'right' to be homeless. Now, they roam the streets pushing people onto subway tracks and there's nothing you can do about it until after something happens.

:mindblown:
 
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myth? proof of people not being homeless by choice. do you have it?

You bring your proof forward...you brought it to light.

metal health issues aren't a choice. but then again you can't make people get the help they need.

People who have mental issues who are homeless can't choose to be homeless or not was my point.


ignorance? addressing an issue that requires resources (money) when they're laying off police, firemen, teachers, closing schools, and reducing the budget isn't exactly a sign of ignorance. priorities maybe, but not ignorance.

When your view is "Oh look at the homeless people ruining my night life at the club" was ignorance. Sadly all those resources of laying people off is the cause of the homelessness. Think about it. People aren't waking up one day saying "Oh I want to be homeless".

 
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