A first-of-its-kind program in New York City is trying to keep at-risk young people stably housed by giving them a one-time cash payment to keep them from becoming homeless.
Point Source Youth, a national organization trying to end youth homelessness, helped launch the cash transfer program in the city with two local nonprofits earlier this year. The goal is to help 100 young adults between the ages of 18 and 24 avoid entering the shelter system by providing one-time payments ranging from $645 to $9,900 that they can use to pay overdue rent or find new living arrangements.
โIt gives autonomy to that young person. It gives them access to the cash to then pay the arrears to remain in the apartment. And it shows that young person, that they’re trusted with the amount of money they need to solve the problem,โ said Larry Cohen, Point Source Youth’s executive director and co-founder.
โWe see that unmet flexibility leads to young people being not served well because the program doesn’t exist that they actually need,โ he added.
Cohen hopes the program can be scaled up across the city as one of the solutions to curbing rising homelessness rates. The cityโs shelter population is at a record high, largely fueled by the arrival of new migrants, while the number of people sleeping on the street reached a 15-year peak this year. But the number of shelter beds set aside specifically for young people has remained stagnant for years and homeless advocates say the cityโs main shelter system isnโt set up to meet the needs of young adults.
Chantella Mitchell, a program officer at the New York Community Trust, believes the cash transfer program can help young people avoid the shelter system in the first place.
โYou can intervene with the amount of assistance that they need before it becomes, โOh, we have to now pay for the shelter costs,โโ she said. The New York Community Trust, a prominent charitable group in the city, is helping fund advocacy efforts around the…
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