The
Melnea Cass Recreational Complex in Roxbury was utilized as a temporary
shelter for migrants and other homeless families from January until
June, 2024. Mayor Michelle Wu along with Governor Maura Healey and other
elected officials and civic leaders visited the complex on Jan. 31.Massachusetts received more than $20 million in federal funding to assist in managing its ongoing shelter crisis, the state announced on Aug. 28.
In June, the state filed a joint application with Boston for funding from FEMA’s Shelter and Services Program to alleviate the financial burden of its overburdened shelter system.
“Massachusetts urgently needs federal support as we work to meet unprecedented demand on our family shelter system as a result of a surge in immigrant families arriving in our state,” said Gov. Maura Healey in a statement.
She added that “the Biden-Harris administration has taken important steps to address this federal problem in light of Congress’ failure to act, and they are seeing results with illegal border crossings down significantly. But more needs to be done. Congress needs to step up and pass the bipartisan border security agreement.”
In May, a 43-50 Senate vote blocked a bipartisan immigration bill proposed by Democrats that would reduce border crossings at the southern border of the U.S. and restrict the asylum system.
Over the last year, Massachusetts has seen an influx of migrants, many of them from Haiti, where they fled economic chaos and gang violence. The result has left state-run family shelters overflowing as migrant and local families seek refuge where it is limited.
The federal funds will
support temporary “respite” shelters in Lexington, Cambridge, Chelsea
and Norfolk, said Karissa Hand, a spokesperson for the state, where
stays are generally limited to five days. Previously, families were
allowed to stay in these locations for 30 days, but Healey reduced the
limit to cope with the buckling system.
In
a statement earlier this year, the state government indicated it would
not open any more temporary shelters “due to operational and financial
constraints.”
Last
fall, Healey capped the state shelter capacity at 7,500 families. As of
Sept. 6, 7,195 families are living in emergency assistance shelters
across Massachusetts, according to state data.
Carolyn
Chou, executive director of Homes for All Massachusetts, a statewide
coalition for tenant organizing groups, called the state’s shelter
limits “inhumane” and said they put families in “impossible”
circumstances.
Homes for All Massachusetts has partnered with organizations such as the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless,
the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute and City Life/Vida Urbana to
address the shelter crisis for unhoused Massachusetts locals and
incoming migrant families.
While
the federal assistance Massachusetts received is “important” in
addressing housing challenges, Chou said, the bulk of the responsibility
lies on the state.
“We
are proud to be a rightto-shelter state, and we need to protect and
maintain the right to shelter,” she said, adding that Massachusetts
needs “to continue to fund the system at the levels it needs, and
reverse policies that are threatening the right to shelter and are
creating untenable situations for residents.”
Joyce
Tavon, CEO of the Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance, a
nonprofit organization that aims to end homelessness with a focus on
adult populations, echoed Chou, saying, “any federal resources to help
with this crisis are important.”
Although the MHSA does not serve adults accompanied by children, the population for which the federal funds are reserved,
Tavon said, in general, “homelessness is a housing problem.” Boston,
where costs of living are on the rise, has one of the highest rates of
homelessness among metropolitan cities in the U.S., second only to New
York City, a report published in August found. As housing shortages and
overcrowding continued to play a role in the state’s shelter crisis,
homelessness soared by 27 percent from 2022 to 2023, according to the
report. Seventy percent of Greater Boston’s unhoused people are in
family units, and the influx of migrant families has contributed to
increasing homelessness.
Tavon
said a “federal response” was necessary in addressing what has become
“a much bigger humanitarian immigration-related crisis that brings in
international issues,” adding that unhoused adults not accompanied by
children are also vulnerable.
“I
understand the state is doing what it can, but the state is in a
difficult position, and its ability to respond … on the family side has
an impact on everything, because it’s taking the significant investment
of resources,” Tavon said.
At this time, the state has not applied for further federal funding to cover its family shelter costs, Hand said.
Boston, where over 200 families are housed in the state’s temporary shelters, will receive $1.3 million of the federal funding.
“This
FEMA award is a critical resource for Boston as we continue to serve
immigrants arriving in the city,” said Mayor Michelle Wu. “We are
grateful for our ongoing and comprehensive partnerships with both the
state and our federal delegation as we all work together to respond to
this ongoing crisis.”
Wu said the funding would help support shelter, food and other services as the colder months approach.