Cuomo to MTA: Crack down on homeless in NYC subways

Bloomberg

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said the state transit agency must rid city subways of a growing homeless population.
In a letter sent to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s (MTA) board of directors, Cuomo said they should confront the issue as part of a
reorganisation plan the state legislature required last month. The MTA and the city police department have to stop pointing at each other to avoid responsibility, he said.
About 2,200 homeless persons are living in the subways this year, a 23 percent increase over 2018, Cuomo said in the letter. Homeless persons delayed trains on 659 occasions last year, by walking on tracks or engaging in other disruptive conduct, he wrote.
“I’ve never seen it this bad,” said Cuomo, a Democrat. “I’ve never seen it as a year-round phenomenon. ”
In pushing the MTA, Cuomo described himself as an expert in homelessness policy even before he served as US Secretary of Housing in former President Bill Clinton’s administration.
In his nine years as governor, Cuomo has been attacked by advocates for tenants and the homeless who say he worsened the problem by failing to support laws that would prevent deregulation of rent-stabilised housing.
Such attacks became muted this year after he agreed to sign a package of sweeping tenant protections approved by both the state Senate and Assembly, which Democrats control for the first time in decades. The homeless population began to spike in 2011, after the governor eliminated state aid for rent subsidies to tenants at risk of eviction, according to Kenneth Schaeffer, a lawyer for the Metropolitan Council On Housing, a tenant advocacy group.
“Governor Cuomo’s failure to push for stronger rent laws
has directly contributed to increased homelessness,” Schaeffer wrote in a 2016 article published on the council’s website, titled “Cuomo’s Homelessness Hypocrisy.”
“This year Governor Cuomo signed into law the strongest rent laws ever passed in New York, and under his $20 billion housing plan we are well underway to create new affordable and supportive housing units,” said Cuomo Press Secretary Caitlin Girouard. “Governor Cuomo has been on the frontlines fighting homelessness in New York and across the country for decades — any suggestion otherwise is ridiculous.”

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