NYC's Record Homeless Population Seeks Shelter at LaGuardia
New York's affordable housing crisis has forced some homeless to live in the airport for years
by Martin Z Braun
10:15 AM EDT March 10, 2015
From a distance, Joseph Sowards looks like any traveler stuck for the night at LaGuardia Airports central terminal after his flight was canceled. Get closer, and it becomes clear from his layered clothing and dirty hands that hes one of New York Citys record number of homeless.
They dont bother me here, said Sowards, 44, an unlicensed plumber from Maspeth, Queens, who was lying on the floor. Hes been sleeping in parks and abandoned buildings for the past 10 years.
While the homeless population is bigger at the Port Authority bus terminal and Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan, a growing number are finding shelter at New Yorks airports, according to Volunteers of America. Since 1986, the 118-year-old nonprofit has provided outreach to the homeless at LaGuardia and John F. Kennedy International airports under a contract with the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey.
Sowards was one of about two dozen people who had taken shelter in LaGuardias 50-year-old central terminal on a subfreezing night this month. They slept in seats at the baggage claim and waiting areas and on radiators in the presecurity food court. They used restroom sinks to wash, and some with suitcases blended in with other stranded travelers.
Volunteers of America, which has offices at LaGuardia and JFK, counted a monthly average of 45 chronic homeless people at LaGuardia in 2014, an 80 percent increase over the average month in 2011. On the coldest nights, as many as 50 took refuge at LaGuardia in East Elmhurst, Queens. JFKs chronic homeless increased to an average of 33 per month, double the number in 2011.
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-10/nyc-s-record-homeless-population-seeks-shelter-at-laguardia