Some homeless New York families are required to spend months in a shelter before they become eligible for a voucher for more permanent housing. And removing the decades-long requirement could save the city millions as it currently faces economic uncertainty, according to a new study out Monday.
โThere is no good reason for it: it costs money, it causes more trauma and it reduces the amount of time people have to look for housing,โ said Christine Quinn, president and CEO of Win, which provides shelter and supportive services for homeless families with children and authored the study.
Homeless families with children must spend three months in a homeless shelter before they can access a CityFHEPS housing voucher, in what is known as the cityโs 90-Day Rule. Itโs been a source of frustration for some politicians and homeless advocates who say that shelters require more money to upkeep โ and prolongs a psychologically challenging period for young children.
The push to end the requirement is being compounded by the cityโs ongoing economic uncertainty. Mayor Eric Adams already called for steep budget cuts across various agencies in anticipation of the ongoing influx of migrants into the city now that a pandemic-era measure that previously quelled these numbers is now expired. Advocates are now calling for the adoption of legislation โ backed by half of the City Council โ that would end this rule.
Ditching the 90-day-rule could save the city โtens of millions of dollars,โ according to Quinn.
โThree months out of a little childโs life is a great deal of time,โ Quinn said. โSo beyond just the inhumanity of it, it costs the city money. Putting someone in permanent housing โ with a voucher โ is significantly cheaper than it is to pay for someone in a shelter, and even cheaper than the most expensive welfare hotel option.โ
Housing a singular family of three in a traditional shelter costs the city $188 per night โ and the number climbs to $383 if…
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