Island Homeless Face Prospect of No Shelters This Winter

Martha’s Vineyard’s homeless shelter program is at risk for staying shuttered this winter due to the complications of the pandemic, posing new dangers for the most vulnerable residents.

Martha’s Vineyard’s homeless shelter program — which was long in the making and finally got off the ground just five years ago — is now at risk for staying shuttered this winter due to the complications of the pandemic, posing new dangers for the Island’s most vulnerable population.

Shelter organizers are working with the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital to keep both daytime and overnight warming shelters open this year. But all said there are no guarantees.

“It’s going to be an acute problem very soon. The days are not getting warmer. And we have a group of people who have nowhere to go,” hospital president and chief executive officer Denise Schepici said.

Last winter, when the pandemic arrived in full force by mid-March, Houses of Grace — the Island’s only homeless shelter program — had to close about three weeks early due to serious safety, health and space concerns.

Based on past experience, the consequences of not having a winter shelter are dire.

“We had five residents die . . . found in the woods, because there was no place for these individuals to go,” Ms. Schepici said during a press briefing Wednesday. “That spun my head around. These were folks that weren’t admitted to our emergency room and didn’t have anywhere to seek shelter.”

Karen Tewhey, who formerly ran the county homelessness prevention program, explained later that the individuals died outside during the winter of 2016-2017, when the shelter program was just starting.

Ms. Schepici said the individuals were suffering with symptoms of hypothermia, as well as other conditions.

“I was just shocked, and really, really saddened,” Ms. Schepici said upon hearing about the deaths of homeless residents. “We certainly hope to avoid that this year.”

To that end, the hospital has offered to help with funding and protective equipment to help keep daytime and overnight warming shelters open this winter for homeless people on the Island.

But with the pandemic still raging in many parts of the country and severe health restrictions still in place throughout the commonwealth and Island, the situation for the shelter program this year has become more complicated.

Speaking to the Gazette by phone, Ms. Tewhey, who now runs Harbor Homes of Martha’s Vineyard, said it seems very unlikely that the shelter will be able to reopen this season.

The Rev. Chip Seadale, rector at St. Andrew’s church in Edgartown who serves as de-facto head of the program, concurred, saying that it would be difficult to find a suitable space to house homeless individuals overnight considering the risks with Covid-19. Church dioceses have changed their authorization rules for overnight occupancy programs, rendering most religious spaces — traditionally used as overnight shelters — unworkable. Other suitable spaces for the program, such as fire stations or other community buildings, present their own challenges, Reverend Seadale said.

“In my mind, unless we can find a large enough space that can handle the aerosol load for an overnight of about 15 people or less — we averaged about 10 or so last year, plus two staff members per night — we’re kind of dead in the water,” he said.

He said the likelihood of finding such a space was small.

“My odds are really low,” Reverend Seadale said. “Big spaces on the Island are hard . . . especially heated ones.”

On top of that, issues of staffing — including the fact that many of the shelter’s elderly volunteers are already at high risk for the virus — as well as other lodging and health restrictions at both the state and local level have further put the shelter program in jeopardy.

Ms. Tewhey and Reverend Seadale also both said the daytime warming centers on the Island, run in previous years by Rebecca Jamieson, would likely not be able to open this year either.

There are approximately 120 critically homeless individuals on the Island, according to Ms. Tewhey. About two dozen of those individuals are regularly serviced by the Houses of Grace shelter program, with shelter occupancy hovering around eight to 10 guests on any given night.

Reverend Seadale said the number of individuals who spend the night elsewhere is even more striking.

“There’s a whole sub-demographic that comes out to use these facilities that really are on the tip of the iceberg for a larger demographic that sleep in the woods, sleep in cars, sleep in sheds,” he said. “And that’s a little scary, especially for a place like Martha’s Vineyard.”

Once a largely informal patchwork of religious and municipal advocacy groups, the Island’s homelessness prevention network has made strides in recent years to formalize its shelter program, which began Houses of Grace five years ago. The shelter normally runs from Jan. 1 through March 31, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., providing daily warm beds, dinners and breakfast to people who are homeless or housing insecure.

The Federated Church in Edgartown, the Good Shepherd Parish in Oak Bluffs and St. Andrew’s parish house in Edgartown all rotate shelter nights, with four of the nights coming at St. Andrew’s. The churches are staffed with four volunteers per night; two leave around 9 p.m., and two more stay through the night.

Although no final decisions on the shelter and warming center programs have been made, Ms. Tewhey gave a presentation at a recent meeting of the Dukes County health council describing the challenges if neither space can open this winter. In an interview this week, she reiterated those concerns.

Without a winter shelter, individuals who are living outside in the cold will go to the emergency room at the hospital, Ms. Tewhey said, and there won’t be an identified place for the hospital to release them. She said misdemeanor crimes would likely increase, with people who are homeless seeking shelter in jails where there is a warm cot. And there will be more individuals — many of whom struggle with substance abuse or mental health issues — camping deep in the state forest and lighting fires, she said.

“There is concern about that. It is like a tinderbox out there,” Ms. Tewhey said, referring to the ongoing drought on the Island and concerns about wildfires.

Ms. Tewhey confirmed that Houses of Grace is the only homeless shelter program on the Island. The closest mainland overnight winter shelter is in Hyannis, which is often filled to capacity. A shelter in Wareham nearly closed because demand had risen so precipitously after the pandemic began.

Despite all the challenges, efforts are still being made to salvage the program.

At the press briefing Wednesday, Ms. Schepici said the hospital was in conversations with homelessness advocates to ensure shelters could open this winter, even if they opened in a changed capacity. She said the hospital would be willing to provide protective equipment for volunteers — as well as service a grant that could help Houses of Grace hire staff.

“We are having some very early discussions to see what we can do to elicit support and get these things reactivated,” Ms. Schepici said.

When the shelter closed last winter, Ms. Tewhey received an approximately $30,000 grant to house individuals in hotels. But because of rules about health, safety and drug use, recipients were restricted to a very small subset of the homeless population.

Reverend Seadale said the program could conceivably operate with the hospital’s help. But everything hinges on finding a space.

“Where are the people who freeze to death in the winter, where are they going to go?” he asked.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 09/24/2020 - 18:01

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

With all the undeserved wealth on this island it's a disgrace for anyone to be homeless or hungry.

KM OB

Equally, with all the wealth of this great COUNTRY, it’s a disgrace.. Don’t put it all on the individuals- the tax paying nation as a whole has a responsibility to look after those less fortunate.

Up Island Resident West Tisbury

But have you opened your door to the homeless? If not, don't condemn others. Why any homeless person would choose to live in one of the most expensive places in the world is beyond me. Go to the free public library, use the internet, and find a place that provides housing for the homeless. I know I would do that if I were homeless. Actually, I would find a job if I could work.

Carol formerly Chilmark

I completely agree, Charlie Callahan. Sleeping in the woods? When it's below freezing? And then the dead are found in the woods? With the disgusting levels of wealth on this Island? It turns my stomach and breaks my heart. Seriously, how hard would it be to throw up a bunch of heated tiny homes with HEPA filters on some rich idiot's land?!

Hard worker VH

Why do you use the term “rich idiots”? People who have succeeded are not idiots. And Let us not forget that those who have earned wealth through being successful are those that fund most of the non profit organizations on the island. Without your “rich idiots”, many of the services provided today would struggle significantly. Don’t throw stones. Homelessness is a worldwide issue.

Lawrence Glastonbury CT

Typical Dem's - blame it on the successful people when it has nothing to do with their hard work. Most likely these "undeserved wealth" people you're referring to are making huge donations to Vineyard charities but not blabbering to everyone about it. Be careful what you wish for, alot of beautiful places to spend a summer in the US. Alot of other places that appreciate the business.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 09:05

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Brian Kelly Oak Bluffs

Might be the time for some creative thinking about uses of the funds created by the sale of homes on the island, in partnership with the Land trust organizations to find the space and funding to construct a permanent solution...and seek the necessary changes in law to accomplish that solution. The means are in place.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 09:17

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Problem Solver Edgartown

Would the Ag Hall in WT be a suitably large location for a temporary shelter?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 09:29

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Laurie Bowers Griswold

Is there any money to purchase the youth hostel and turn it into a homeless shelter? I know housing is very expensive on the island.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 09:31

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Lorraine Edgartown

While there are people who are homeless through calamity, tragedy, the covid virus limitations, there are many with addiction issues, mental issues, medical issues that lead them to refuse all rules and regulations in homeless housing programs. No one has found a way to deal with this; what do we do? Tell me, what do we do with those who refuse to cooperate? No one will answer that as there is presently no way to do this. Simply lumping all homeless together and chastising everyone as being selfish, we simply have to find a way to solve this issue. We cannot lock people up against their will due to civil liberties, we cannot incorporate them into a homeless shelter where there are people who do cooperate. There is no answer.

Carol formerly Chilmark

With respect, your comment is completely wrong in almost every respect. 1. Addiction is a mental health issue. They need treatment. 2. Lumping all homeless together is correct insofar as we are discussing their status as not having shelter. 3. We do not need to solve every problem that every homeless person has - we just need to provide them with free shelter from the elements. 4. I am 62, and I remember when this country DID NOT have a homeless problem - to wit, 1979. Ronald Reagan created it when he closed the federal mental health facilities and gutted the social safety net. I watched as the line at the soup kitchen I passed on the way to work each morning (I lived in San Francisco then) grew from two or three people to two or three hundred - in one year. So don't tell me nothing can be done! What is done by people, can be UNDONE by people. For shame!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 10:25

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RG Edgartown

"Up Island Resident", Maybe you have never suffered from mental illness. Many times mental illness prevents you from searching and finding resources, to include libraries and work.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 13:12

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Carol VH

Hillside Village has a large, heated community room with a kitchen and bathroom, separate from the elderly apts. It could be used.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 19:11

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Homeless New Yorker New York City

I can't find words.

Methinks the good people of Martha's Vineyard should consult with public health and social determinants of health (#SDoH) experts from NYC and Boston, like those tagged in my tweet linked below: Dr. Kelly Doran MD MHS (@KellyMDoran), Dr. Travis Baggett (@TPBaggett), the National Health Care for the Homeless Council (@NatlHCHCouncil). Somehow we've been able to run shelters all through the pandemic safely enough without closing. If we could do it, they can do it. Just have the will and enough money - there must be a way. I don't believe Martha's Vineyard does not have enough money.

https://twitter.com/homeless_new/status/1309621743884132353

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 21:13

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Questioning causes West tisbury

While addiction issues, and mental health can certainly be causes of homelessness on the island. I cant help but think that ive seen none of the panhandling, shopping cart pushing, and vagary ive seen in cities (or other smaller towns).
3 questions/1 point

1. How many homeless people on the island are working?
2. How many of them dont make enough to afford housing?

And a follow up

If the dont make enough to afford housing on island, but if they moved somewhere else to comfortably rent. Then why is it our problem?
Im a working class man with no sense of entitlement, and i strongly believe in social programs. The history of this country has a familiar constant, always searching for the next frontier. When people were economically pushed out of where they wanted to be, they looked to the next frontier.

I will, for the years to come, do the island shuffle. And if the time comes when its untenable to rent on the island, i will move on.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/25/2020 - 23:18

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Tom Up island

Lots of ignorant comments around a complex issue. Economic, social responsibility, and mental health issues at play. Wish I had an answer. I know the answer is not in some of the dim comments at the start of this thread.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/26/2020 - 10:14

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Dennis McAndrews

Could the Massachusetts National Guard be asked to provide large tents, cots, and heaters, with preservation land used for that purpose? Obviously this is a short-term solution for a long-term problem, but allowing people to freeze to death this winter should be unacceptable to everyone regardless of political or philosophical persuasion.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/26/2020 - 23:00

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bs Oak Bluffs

This is Martha's Vineyard. There is no, and there will never be, any affordable place here to live. Go to where your skills and work ethic will provide a home for you. Mean, well, yes, truthful absolutely. Over 16,000 people here have figured it out. If you can't make it here then there are many other opportunities across this great country for you to prosper. Go seek them.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 09/27/2020 - 15:29

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Marty Milner Tallahassee

National Roof Over Your Head Day is December 3. It isn't really about COVID, is it? Evictions are slated to spiral into the hundreds of thousands by mid winter. In the first week of August 230,000 were evicted. Is there an effective safety net now available in America? By the time it becomes "your problem" it will be way to large to process for anyone. Leaders have the responsibility to lead, not ignore.

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