The pandemic ushered in a new era of emergency housing, but it now faces
a fiscal cliff
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[December 22, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – For Illinois’ homeless populations and those that serve
them, the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated a crisis – the volunteer, mostly
faith-based shelters that had long been the backbone of the state’s
emergency housing system were closing their doors.
But with the crisis – and a sudden influx of temporary federal, state
and philanthropic funding – came an opportunity to move away from an
already-stressed emergency housing system to what advocates say is a
more dignified and effective one.
Those same advocates, however, say the new system, largely based on
using government vouchers to fund private hotel rooms, is on the edge of
a fiscal cliff as federal COVID-19 response funding dries up.
It’s a pressing issue, more than 220 housing advocacy organizations
wrote to Gov. JB Pritzker this week, because Illinois is already about
4,500 beds short of the 11,300 it needs to accommodate all individuals
seeking shelter on a given night, according to a recent report to a
state homelessness task force.
“Without a significant increase in state funding, the severe shelter
shortage will worsen,” the advocates wrote in the letter dated Dec. 21,
coinciding with the first day of winter. “(Illinois Shelter Alliance)
members estimate that at least 1,600 existing shelter beds could be lost
during 2023 due to federal COVD-19 relief funds, mostly being spent on
hotel vouchers, being fully expended.”
The Illinois Shelter Alliance is a coalition of more than 50 emergency
and transitional housing organizations from throughout Illinois that
have organized to push for increased state emergency housing investment.
The ask for the upcoming fiscal year which begins July 1 is a $51
million, six-fold increase to a long-stagnant emergency housing line
item to sustain the new system and create a bridge to a more permanent
one.
It’s increasingly important, the letter noted, as Alliance members
reported up to 76 percent of the churches and other facilities that have
provided congregate shelters previously are unable or unwilling to
resume doing so due to closures, declining membership and COVID-19
concerns.
“So, pre-pandemic, the shelter model was people survive the winter
because churches let them sleep on the floor,” Doug Kenshol, executive
director of the emergency housing organization South Suburban PADS, one
of the signers of the letter, said in a phone call.
The pandemic, he said, changed things “almost overnight.”
Providers rallied to raise the funds for hotel rooms before federal aid
was provided in late March 2020 via the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and
Economic Security, or CARES Act. Federal allotments have largely
sustained the new model since that point.
“The current model has been so much better than what came before,”
Kenshol said. “Now that we have people in hotel rooms, it's more
dignified. They have privacy, they have stability, safety. They've got a
locked door. They can take showers.”
Kenshol, who is also a founding member of the ISA, said while the
pandemic has represented a breaking point, the old system was always
inadequate and underfunded.
Since Fiscal Year 2003, state funding stagnated at about $10 million
annually, a number that, factoring in inflation, amounted to a 50
percent cut over that span, advocates wrote. It amounts to just 6
percent of the funding that would be needed to make sure that all who
need it have shelter.
Kenshol illustrated the effects of disinvestment on human terms,
recalling an individual who was dropped off by ambulance at a suburban
shelter in the years prior to the pandemic. The person had been out in
the cold, experienced frostbite and had all his fingers amputated.
“And then the individual was dumped off at a shelter, a place with no
professional staffing. A place operated entirely by volunteers,” Kenshol
said. “This person could not feed himself or bathe himself and he was
being dropped off at the church for shelter.”
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As federal funds dry up, he said, the emergency housing system could end
up in worse shape than it was prior to the pandemic if more funds are
not made available.
“And so we've been in a panic at various points during the last two
years that funding is ending and we have no other option, that we’ll hit
a cliff and everybody is just going to be put out into the street,” he
said.
The requested increase would bring state emergency and transitional
housing funding to $61.4 million, up from a $10.4 million allotment
that’s been relatively static for years.
Of that, $20 million would sustain 1,600 beds which advocates say are in
danger of disappearing. Roughly $29 million would go toward increasing
the number of emergency shelter beds by 1,500, leasing approximately
1,000 apartments to rapidly rehouse families, and increasing the number
of available hotel vouchers by more than 500.
About $2 million of the budget request would be used to help agencies
with employee recruitment and retention, including hiring staff to work
with people to find alternatives to going to a homeless shelter.
But it’s also part of a broader long-term vision that, in the coming
years, could add as many as 3,000 beds.
The ISA members noted that while the federal hotel voucher funds are
drying up, state agencies will soon make available another $57 million
in federal funding allocated specifically for the purchase or renovation
of sites to serve as fixed-site and non-congregate shelter. Many local
governments are also providing capital development funds from their
federal allocations.
While this creates a “once-in-a-generation opportunity to build a more
humane and effective crisis housing system” with federal resources, the
advocates wrote, state funding is “crucial” to providing the ongoing
operational funding for the new system.
Thus, a large part of the money used for vouchers in the upcoming fiscal
year could be used in later years to fund the provider-run shelters that
are created with the federal funds.
Kenshol said for organizations like South Suburban PADS – which is
looking to purchase up to two hotels and potentially an apartment
building – the state funding is necessary for it to be able to
demonstrate fiscal solvency on its applications for federal funding.
The Pritzker administration has acknowledged the importance of providing
such shelter, both in a June housing report, entitled “Home Illinois,”
and through a recent Dec. 8 announcement that the Department of Human
Services was increasing current-year emergency housing appropriation by
$5 million through a redistribution of funds already allocated to IDHS.
“I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: shelter is not a privilege —
it’s a right,” Pritzker said in a news release coinciding with the
recent funding announcement. “With the winter season well underway and
snowy days on our horizon, we are investing $5 million to ensure that no
Illinoisan goes without the shelter they need to stay warm, safe, and
healthy.”
A spokesperson for Pritzker said he and IDHS “look forward to working
with advocates to ensure sustained investments in these critical
programs in the years to come.” He noted that the current-year IDHS
budget included an additional $15 million for homeless prevention
programs, including the recent $5 million increase.
In their letter, the advocates thanked the Pritzker administration for
its focus on ending homelessness. Increasing emergency housing capacity,
they said, is the most important next step to getting there.
“We and others will do everything we can do to make sure the State of
Illinois does create enough affordable housing that will end
homelessness, but, even under the best circumstances, that will take a
number of years,” Bob Palmer, an ISA member and policy director for
Housing Action Illinois, said in an email. “Right now, we have to have a
much more well-resourced emergency shelter system, especially not to go
backwards in terms of serving people who are without a home today.”
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