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By the numbers: Massachusetts sees drop in families needing emergency housing
By the numbers: Massachusetts sees drop in families needing emergency housing

Yahoo

time06-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

By the numbers: Massachusetts sees drop in families needing emergency housing

BOSTON (WWLP) – The number of families who are in emergency housing in Massachusetts continues to decline, the state's biweekly report indicates. As of May 1, there is a total of 4,800 families assigned to shelters, on one of two tracks, the bridge or rapid. Both have the goal of making shelter stays rare, brief, and non-recurring, and aim to give families the resources they need to acquire stable housing and employment. Springfield Works launches pilot program to help those who exceed public assistance benefits Bridge Shelter families are considered to have higher or more complex needs and are permitted to stay in traditional shelters for up to six months. There are 4,608 families currently in this system. Rapid Shelter families are determined to have lower support needs and are permitted to stay in temporary shelter sites for up to 30 days. There are 192 families currently in this system. The state is also working to transition families out of hotels and place them into safe and stable housing. Over the last 14 days, 1,2,12 hotel rooms have been in use for those in the emergency shelter system, and 196 have since been phased out. Number of families in western Massachusetts emergency shelters: Of the 4,800 families in shelters or hotels, 1,981 of those entered Massachusetts as migrants, refugees, or asylum seekers. In western Massachusetts, the following towns and cities have families in the Bridge track: Amherst: 5 Chicopee: 35 (23 hotel rooms in use) Greenfield: 8 Holyoke: 158 Northampton: 2 (2 hotel rooms in use) Pittsfield: 14 Springfield: 250 West Springfield: 29 (28 hotel rooms in use) Reasons for homelessness Domestic violence or abuse: 389 Health and Safety Risk / Ask to Leave, Threatened Eviction: 999 Housing situation not meant for human habitation: 1,742 Fire, flood, or natural disaster: 29 Asked to leave a Teen Living Program: 10 Other: 1,220 Eviction: 450 According to the report, fiscal year 2025's project costs will be around $1.064 billion. Local News Headlines WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WWLP.

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