Mayor Zohran Mamdani is facing criticism and questions from advocates for homeless New Yorkers after abruptly reversing his policy pledge to end homeless encampment sweeps.
City Hall officials said outreach workers with the Department of Homeless Services would begin notifying street homeless New Yorkers this week of plans to clear them out of public spaces. During a sweep, city sanitation workers often trash tents, makeshift encampments and other belongings if people refuse to pack up and go to a shelter or another location.
Mamdani had called the encampment sweeps done by his predecessors Eric Adams and Bill de Blasio a “failure” because they rarely led to people being placed in permanent housing. He billed the new plan as a kinder, gentler approach to addressing street homelessness, saying the city would conduct daily outreach in the seven days before police and sanitation workers arrived to disperse encampments or makeshift shelters.
But advocates for homeless New Yorkers say Mamdani’s plan is more of the same, and will displace people while moving only a fraction of them into shelters or permanent housing.
“It’s a huge step backwards,” said Josh Goldfein, a staff attorney for the Legal Aid Society. “It seems like what’s happening now is the administration is caving to political pressure to say they have to push people out with force rather than approaching them with resources that they need and will accept.”
Mamdani has faced pressure to resume sweeps from business leaders, elected officials and media outlets since he halted the policy days after taking office. Those calls intensified after at least 19 people died outdoors during a recent stretch of cold weather — though it was unclear how many of the people were living in encampments. At least five had permanent housing.
crosspost from https://hexbear.net/post/7702840



Unfortunately, to fully fix the homeless issue there will have to be involuntary commitments. Some people just don’t want help. They don’t want to take their meds because the side effects suck, or they don’t want to quit their addiction.
I met many of them volunteering at homeless shelters. There were regulars that would come for food, but refused any other help we could offer (typically because to stay there you couldn’t have drugs or alcohol).
The resources to help them get back on their meds or go to rehab for free existed and were offered every time.
I’m not saying that these people are the majority of homeless people, because I know most homeless people just need a helping hand to get back on their feet. And I’m not saying these people don’t deserve help. But these people seem to be frequently forgotten when the discussion comes up.
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