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Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Indy reverses course on Fountain Square homeless camp, will house residents before shutdown
After weeks of sharp criticism, Indianapolis leaders have again changed their approach to a prominent Fountain Square homeless camp and will allow residents to remain at the site until they are offered housing. The Office of Public Health and Safety announced Aug. 15 that residents who still live at or recently left the homeless camp along Leonard Street will be housed through Streets to Home Indy, a new city-backed initiative to place more than 300 people known to be living on the streets into apartments by next June. At each camp, the process is expected to take four to six weeks. 'We appreciate everyone's patience — we needed to ensure the best outcomes for our unhoused and housed neighbors, acting with compassion and diligence to find the right solution," OPHS Director Andrew Merkley said in a written statement Aug. 15. "I'm grateful that Streets to Home Indy is able to find housing for these individuals and permanently close this camp." With the decision, Merkley is in effect doing what critics urged him to do during a contentious town hall held days after his July 25 decision to close the camp by Aug. 11. Instead of pushing people from one tent encampment to another, advocates for people who are homeless say service providers should offer people stable housing and case management. But Merkley also faced intense pressure to shut down the camp from Fountain Square homeowners and business leaders, who said that taxpaying residents should not have to live steps away from the trash, human waste and drug and alcohol consumption that they say occurred at the site. Merkley ultimately chose to close the camp after someone who seemingly did not live there fired a gunshot near a camp resident's tent the morning of July 25, according to police. He also cited alleged animal abuse at the camp in June and the site's dangerous proximity to the road as part of why it had become an imminent public safety threat. A change in the city's approach became evident earlier this week, however, when Aug. 11 came and went but nine people still apparently lived at the camp the next morning. Even camp residents were confused, with some having left before the deadline and others staying after they learned that the city would not push them away. Merkley said Aug. 13 that because the suspects in the alleged shooting and animal abuse were arrested, he felt that the largest public safety threats had been mitigated. He emphasized that no new residents will be allowed to live at the camp. Homelessness: What Trump's attack on 'Housing First' means for Indy's effort to end chronic and street homelessness In defense of the July 25 order to close the camp, Merkley had said that Streets to Home Indy wasn't prepared to take on a site as large as Leonard Street, where more than two dozen tents sat as of late July. But now the program, led by service providers like the Coalition for Homelessness Intervention and Prevention and Horizon House, has closed an initial camp at an undisclosed location and housed 10 people who were living there. Leaders say they won't often publicly share which site they're working at because they don't want homeless people to flock there in search of housing. Social workers will move to house everyone who was living at Leonard Street, based on a list of names they collected in recent weeks. "This is exactly what Streets to Home Indy is designed to do — address encampments through housing solutions, not displacement," CHIP CEO Chelsea Haring-Cozzi said in a statement. "With growing capacity, we are ready to meet the moment and connect those at Leonard Street to stable housing." While the program works to house residents, the city is paying local nonprofit Keys2Work to clean up litter at the site. The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department will continue to patrol the area and respond to crime reports. After everyone is housed or offered housing, the city will clean up and permanently close the camp. Email IndyStar Reporter Jordan Smith at JTsmith@ Follow him on X: @jordantsmith09 This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Indy reverses course on Fountain Square homeless camp Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
05-08-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Indianapolis homelessness is a housing problem
James Briggs' recent column, "Fountain Square camp shows Indianapolis' homelessness strategy is broken" doesn't accurately describe homelessness. There is no direct causal correlation between homelessness and addiction, mental health, city location or even poverty. Cities with high levels of homelessness have low levels of affordable housing. The accepted 'danger zone' vacancy rate that predicts high homelessness is 5%. Indianapolis is around 4.5%. Briggs: Mike Braun grandstands on Indianapolis crime while murders drop 24% Briggs is correct, however, in noting that any city promises that Streets To Home Indy will end all homelessness are aspirational at best. The true promise of the organization is to end chronic homelessness. There's a big difference. People who are chronically homeless are stuck in a vicious systemic cycle that offers no way out. The same 20 years of data is also clear that permanent housing with the services they need not only breaks the cycle of homelessness, but it also saves between $10K and $20K per person per year compared to how we're doing it now – shelters, temporary housing, and encampments. While there will still be homelessness in 2028, it can be vastly reduced to episodic instances that we can address quickly and with permanent solutions. I also agree that we must empathize with residents and business leaders. That's why closing the Leonard Street encampment without a real solution is simply moving Fountain Square resident's problems to some other neighborhood's problem. Briggs: Fishers, Carmel don't think renters deserve single-family homes Warehousing people in tents is not a solution; it's kicking the proverbial can down the road. Instead of closing the Leonard Street encampment, the city could ask residents for some grace while Streets To Home Indy gets ramped up and we can permanently house folks. I've talked to several residents who were at the July 28 meeting and all agreed that they and their neighbors are willing to wait for the city to do the right thing. Instead, Andrew Merkley and the Indianapolis Office of Public Health and Safety unilaterally decided to sweep people away from Fountain Square to points unknown, making them now a problem for our beleaguered homeless response professionals. We can end chronic homelessness in Indianapolis. If we don't do it now, Gregg Colburn, associate professor of real estate at the University of Washington's College of Built Environments, would predict Indianapolis will become Seattle or San Francisco in less than 10 years. These are cities that will likely never do more than manage their untenable homelessness epidemic. Rabbi Aaron Spiegel is the executive director of the Greater Indianapolis Multifaith Alliance. This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Indianapolis homelessness is a housing problem | Letters Solve the daily Crossword


Indianapolis Star
05-08-2025
- Politics
- Indianapolis Star
Indianapolis homelessness is a housing problem
James Briggs' recent column, "Fountain Square camp shows Indianapolis' homelessness strategy is broken" doesn't accurately describe homelessness. There is no direct causal correlation between homelessness and addiction, mental health, city location or even poverty. Cities with high levels of homelessness have low levels of affordable housing. The accepted 'danger zone' vacancy rate that predicts high homelessness is 5%. Indianapolis is around 4.5%. Briggs: Mike Braun grandstands on Indianapolis crime while murders drop 24% Briggs is correct, however, in noting that any city promises that Streets To Home Indy will end all homelessness are aspirational at best. The true promise of the organization is to end chronic homelessness. There's a big difference. People who are chronically homeless are stuck in a vicious systemic cycle that offers no way out. The same 20 years of data is also clear that permanent housing with the services they need not only breaks the cycle of homelessness, but it also saves between $10K and $20K per person per year compared to how we're doing it now – shelters, temporary housing, and encampments. While there will still be homelessness in 2028, it can be vastly reduced to episodic instances that we can address quickly and with permanent solutions. I also agree that we must empathize with residents and business leaders. That's why closing the Leonard Street encampment without a real solution is simply moving Fountain Square resident's problems to some other neighborhood's problem. Briggs: Fishers, Carmel don't think renters deserve single-family homes Warehousing people in tents is not a solution; it's kicking the proverbial can down the road. Instead of closing the Leonard Street encampment, the city could ask residents for some grace while Streets To Home Indy gets ramped up and we can permanently house folks. I've talked to several residents who were at the July 28 meeting and all agreed that they and their neighbors are willing to wait for the city to do the right thing. Instead, Andrew Merkley and the Indianapolis Office of Public Health and Safety unilaterally decided to sweep people away from Fountain Square to points unknown, making them now a problem for our beleaguered homeless response professionals. We can end chronic homelessness in Indianapolis. If we don't do it now, Gregg Colburn, associate professor of real estate at the University of Washington's College of Built Environments, would predict Indianapolis will become Seattle or San Francisco in less than 10 years. These are cities that will likely never do more than manage their untenable homelessness epidemic.