最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像

Homeless shelters are full across DC and a Georgetown drop-in center is more important than ever

Colder weather means homeless people can access overnight shelter for the first time in months, but has DC planned enough beds for hypothermia season?

D.C.鈥檚 right to shelter begins on Nov. 1 as hypothermia season hits, but right now, more people are reliant on daytime drop-in centers as homeless shelters across the city are almost at full capacity.聽

According to the Interagency Council on Homelessness shelter capacity report shared with 最新蜜桃影像, on 20 Oct., only 13 beds were available in shelters across the city, with an over 98% occupancy rate.聽

Georgetown Ministry Center鈥檚 Executive Director Kelly Andreae has seen the impacts of that firsthand. A man comes into the center every day and borrows its phone to call all the shelters to see if they have a bed available. 鈥淲hen he can鈥檛 get in anywhere he walks the city, usually he has a spot that he stays in and then sleeps outside for the night, and comes back and tries it all over again the next day,鈥 said Andreae

Another woman who regularly visits the center was once late to the shelter because her bus was late. 鈥淪he ended up sleeping in a laundromat and had some really horrible things happen, because she didn鈥檛 get there in time she lost her bed,鈥 Andreae said.聽

Executive Director of Georgetown Ministry Center smiling outside
Kelly Andreae outside Georgetown Ministry Center (Ella Robinson / 最新蜜桃影像)

The city plans to open an additional 726 shelter beds from Nov. 1-March 31, but some members of the Interagency Council for Homelessness said they could not support the . The plan did pass with twenty votes, but eight members voted against it.聽

Kate Coventry, who has been a voting member of the ICH for more than a decade said, 鈥淚 voted yes on the vast majority of the plans that I’ve seen,鈥 but this year she voted against it. She said she 鈥渏ust didn’t feel like the planning for families was sufficient,鈥 raising concerns over the planned capacity and how long it would take to staff extra shelters if needed, particularly for family shelters as those staff require further background checks.

Laura Zeilinger, director of the D.C. Department of Human Services said ahead of the vote at the Sept. 10 meeting, 鈥淥ur success is not in how correct the prediction is, but in meeting the actual need. We have always met and will be prepared to meet the need.鈥

(Georgetown Ministry Center)

Andreae said she is confident they will provide a bed for everyone, but commented: 鈥淭hey鈥檙e already tight and cutting things if you鈥檙e not planning appropriately that can then be even more expensive.鈥澛

Mayor Muriel Bowser vowed to end chronic homelessness by 2017 as part of strategic plan. This year鈥檚 point in time count revealed D.C. had the greatest increase in homelessness across the DMV, with than in 2023.聽

We reached out to the Mayor鈥檚 office and DHS Director Laura Zeilinger. The statement said Mayor Bowser鈥檚 interventions have resulted in a 78% reduction in family homelessness. Zeilinger stated, in part, 鈥淭he Mayor has made unprecedented investments in homelessness prevention and Short-Term Family Housing, including a more than $30 million increase in rapid rehousing this year to support more than 2,000 families with services like enhanced case management and connections to long-term housing.”

Georgetown Ministry Center supports single chronically homeless people rather than families. Kate Coventry from the DC Fiscal Policy Institute told 最新蜜桃影像, 鈥淚t was the worst budget we鈥檝e had since the mayor was elected for housing, we have very few vouchers, which means many more singles will be trapped in shelter for a year or more until more funds are allocated.鈥

鈥淭he most essential thing of my life鈥

Heroine Christopher visits the Georgetown Ministry Center twice a week to shower, shave, and do his laundry. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the most essential thing of my life,鈥 he said.聽

Christopher is one of 1,000 people Georgetown Ministry Center serves each year, providing lunch, coffee, snacks, phone and computer access, a mailing address if needed, laundry facilities, showers, and a place for people to watch TV.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 good to see people in that are in the same situation that I’m in and I can get information about what’s going on with things that that pertain to me, I mean being in this kind of this situation that I’m in,鈥 he said.

Christopher outside the Georgetown Ministry Center
Christopher outside Georgetown Ministry Center (Ella Robinson / 最新蜜桃影像)

Christopher is hoping to stay in a shelter when hypothermia season begins in November, describing the shelter van as a 鈥渂lessing.鈥澛

Georgetown Ministry Center supports people who have been unsheltered for a year or more. They help people who have 鈥渂een failed by that social safety net so many times, building rapport and then lifting them back up and connecting them to the wider support of services,鈥 said Andreae.聽

As well as the drop-in center they provide street outreach, and advocate on behalf of their guests. They hand out warm things to people who can鈥檛 or won鈥檛 go into shelters during hypothermia season for a myriad of reasons – from mental health to not wanting to be separated from loved ones, pets, or belongings.聽

Andreae said a government official told her the Georgetown Ministry Center have identified more people who have been homeless for three or more years than anyone else in the city, helping them to access permanent supportive housing vouchers. 鈥淥ften our guests don鈥檛 have someone to advocate on their behalf, and so that鈥檚 the role we fill,鈥 she said. 鈥淪omeone who cares about them and wants to make sure they get what they deserve.鈥澛

Ella Robinson

Ella Robinson is an investigative journalism graduate student at American University and covers Georgetown for 最新蜜桃影像. She moved to D.C. as a recipient of the Fulbright-American University Award, and previously worked as Editor-in-Chief of the biggest student newspaper in the U.K.

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