The building where a proposed homeless shelter could come to Lower Manhattan.
Photo via Google Maps
Community Board 1 rebuked the Department of Homeless Services over its rollout of a lower Manhattan shelter on Tuesday.
In October, the board received notification that the city is planning to open a shelter for 170 single adults experiencing homelessness at 41-43 Beekman Street just southeast of City Hall. The shelter is planned to open in Late 2024.
Since then community resistance has picked up over the shelter โ largely from parent groups of a school across the street of the proposed location and a large-scale housing co-op thatโs located down the street. According to what DHS has told the community board, the shelter is currently planned for 170 adult men. The agency did not respond with a comment by the time of publication.
The boardโs resolution did not argue directly against the shelter but recommended that DHS facilitate a public meeting over the next 60 days so that residents could lobby to change the population it serves from single men to families. The board requested the city pause signing the final paperwork until after they can hold a public hearing.
The resolution went further to claim that the DHS and its umbrella agency the Department of Social Services had ignored the community boardโs request for a presentation, and had not answered detailed questions its members posed.
At the meeting, more than a dozen members publicly testified about their concerns over the shelter. Parents at The Spruce Street School, which serves Pre-K to 8th grade and sits across the street, said that they believe the studentsโ โsafety could be potentially compromisedโ by the shelter. The PTA and parents have submitted petitions requesting for a family shelter in lieu of one for single men.
โItโs a prevention issue. We do some thinking in advance and we just donโt mix them. And thatโs the kind of logic that should be applied here,โ said CB1…
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