An Unjust Eviction from McPherson Square
Earlier this month, at the request of the District government, the National Park Service abruptly changed its plans and cleared unhoused residents from McPherson Square two months ahead of the previous schedule.
Clearing encampments before people are placed in permanent housing is damaging to our shared goals, and doing it during hypothermia season is inhumane.
I and Councilmembers Robert White, Trayon White, Janeese Lewis George and Matt Frumin each called on the National Park Service to revert to the originally-scheduled April date for clearing the encampment, as the accelerated schedule would be damaging to efforts to move residents of the park into permanent housing. Instead, they went ahead and despite assurances that housing would be found for the 70-plus people living in the park, only a handful found housing by the time NPS went ahead with the operation, as we knew would be the case.
Because of the Homes and Hearts Amendment I authored, there are thousands of housing vouchers available for unhoused residents. The process for approving residents for the vouchers and finding them homes takes too long due to staffing shortages, red tape, and the time it takes to build trust with residents who do not trust that District government means it -- often with good reason -- when they say there is housing for them.
Last week I joined a majority of my Council colleagues in asking the city administrator to work with the Department of Human Services, the Interagency Council on Homelessness, the DC Housing Authority, and national and local housing and homelessness service organizations to come up with an emergency plan by March 15 to clear the backlogs in our housing voucher system. Too many people approved for vouchers are still sleeping in encampments and shelters.
I want to thank the many advocates and nonprofit agencies that brought their voices to bear on this critical issue of dignity and safety for fellow residents. I know they will continue to keep pressure on the Council and the executive branch on issues of housing.
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