The program will dedicate a team of city workers to make contact
with and help the 3,000 to 4,000 people living on the streets and
will be the most comprehensive homeless outreach plan deployed in a
major U.S. city, de Blasio said in a speech.
"This is a fundamental change in how our city contends with a
situation that has been intractable for so many years," de Blasio
said. "No matter how long it takes, we will reach every single
person."
The NYC Homeless Outreach and Mobile Engagement Street Action Team,
or HOME-STAT, which aims to be fully operational by March, is part
of a $2.6 billion plan by the mayor to address homelessness.
It will involve daily sweeps of homeless hot spots and a database to
track the homeless. Each homeless person will be assigned a case
worker, who will try to get medical help and permanent housing for
their clients, many of whom suffer from mental illness and drug
addiction.
As part of the plan, the city will hire 137 new fulltime staff and
train 100 police officers to handle incidents that involve the
homeless.
A new telephone reporting system will enable New Yorkers to report
people living on the street, with the aim that an outreach worker
addresses the issue within an hour.
There are about 58,000 homeless people, almost half of them
children, sleeping in shelters and several thousand more on the
streets on any given night, according to city figures.
De Blasio has struggled to bring down the city's homeless
population, which has risen for decades but reached record highs
during his tenure.
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Earlier this week, he announced the resignation of Gilbert Taylor,
who led the city's Department of Homeless Services, and said
administration officials would consider reorganizing the department.
Some critics have blamed the continued rise in homelessness on the
mayor's left-leaning politics and what they call his anti-police
sentiment.
But advocates applauded the HOME-STAT program and de Blasio's
broader homelessness plan, including the creation of thousands of
affordable housing units and an increase in shelter beds.
"We believe Mayor de Blasio's (plan) will, at long last, bring
thousands of homeless New Yorkers in off the streets and into
permanent housing," advocacy group Coalition for the Homeless said
in a statement.
(Editing by Frances Kerry)
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