Saturday, July 13, 2024

Right-to-Shelter Defenders Back Bill to End 30- and 60-Day Deadlines

In a letter sent to City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams Thursday, the NY SANE Coalition—which represents 65 community and legal services organizations—pressed her and fellow lawmakers to pass bill Intro. 210, which would prohibit the city from putting time limits on homeless shelter stays.

Adi Talwar

The line in front of St. Brigid’s in the East Village, where migrants can reapply for shelter or tickets out of the city, on the morning of May 22, 2024.

Dozens of labor, legal services and community-based organizations are calling for passage of a bill that would prohibit the city from issuing time limits to people in homeless shelters—essentially halting Mayor Eric Adams’ controversial 30- and 60- day deadlines for migrants in the system.

More than 60 members of the The SANE Coalition sent a letter Thursday to City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams urging her and fellow councilmembers to pass Intro. 210which would ban the Department of Social Services “or any other city agency from imposing length of shelter stay restrictions in a shelter of any type.”

The Coalition—formed last year to defend New York right to shelter protections, which has for decades required the city to offer a shelter bed, at least temporarily, to anyone who needs it—called the 30- and 60-day limits “senseless” and “arbitrary.”