Harbor Homes executive director Karen Tewhey.
Ray Ewing/Gazette file photo

Children Numbered Among Homeless Islanders

At least two children and more than 40 adults were found to be homeless on the Island — more than twice as many people as in 2019 — by Harbor Homes of Martha’s Vineyard last month.

At least two children and more than 40 adults were found to be homeless on the Island — more than twice as many people as in 2019 — by Harbor Homes of Martha’s Vineyard last month.

But that’s less than half the true number of the unhoused here, said Harbor Homes executive director Karen Tewhey, who estimated that more than 100 people on the Vineyard have been homeless for each of the past six years.

“Since 2016 . . . we’ve had 100 to 120 referrals each year,” said Ms. Tewhey, who worked on homelessness for Dukes County and with the Martha’s Vineyard Network on Homeless Prevention before founding the Harbor Homes nonprofit in 2019.

“I would say the numbers are going up,” added Ms. Tewhey, who estimated there had been 120 requests for housing assistance in 2022.

A homeless case worker who began working for Harbor Homes last August has already received 77 requests, Ms. Tewhey said.

There are likely more families with children at risk of homelessness, she said, but some parents are reluctant to seek help out of fear they could lose custody.

“They don’t have their own secure housing, [and] they choose to keep a very low profile,” Ms. Tewhey said. “It could have an impact on their families.”

Winter shelter numbers have also increased, from half a dozen people a night to 11 to 12 people, according to a Harbor Homes report on the homeless count.

The recent head count was part of a national effort called the Point in Time count, conducted annually under the ultimate auspices of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

“We transmit our numbers over to the Cape and Islands Regional Network on Homeless Prevention and they send a tally in to, I believe, the state,” Ms. Tewhey said. “It is collected nationally.”

Along with the 11 people who sheltered with Harbor Homes on the Martha’s Vineyard Community Services campus, this year’s Point in Time count included another 10 people in the nonprofit’s subsidized group homes, one in Vineyard Haven for men and one in Oak Bluffs for women.

Others were staying in hotels, with funding from the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital and private donors to provide respite for individuals who are vulnerable for medical reasons and families with children who have lost their rental housing.

And for the past two years, Ms. Tewhey said, at least eight people have remained outside the shelter system on the night of the annual count, typically staying in tents or abandoned vehicles.

There are almost definitely more, she said.

“People have contacted us and told us they don’t have housing and they choose not to go to the shelter, and we don’t know where they are for the night,” Ms. Tewhey said.

The annual homeless census also doesn’t account for the many Island workers who have lost their rentals and, finding themselves priced out of remaining on the Vineyard, moved to the mainland, she said.

“There’s an exodus of employees from the Island who . . . were made homeless and had to leave,” Ms. Tewhey said.

“We’ve lost a significant number of people from the workforce because of the housing issue [and] we can’t get replacements . . . at all levels, skilled and unskilled.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/15/2022 - 06:01

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Brian Vineyard Haven

It is virtually impossible to find reasonable rentals on the Vineyard…. and in most cases year round work … a solution I see is affordable housing in New Bedford and a deal with the Seastreak to transport those individuals who are capable of working to the Island when jobs open up…. This may sound callous … but is a far better idea than having people live in cars or move from homeless shelter to homeless shelter … we are a rich nation giving billions of dollars to other nations when we cannot take of our own …

James EDGARTOWN

It's not Callous at all. It is in fact part of the solution. A commuter ferry is long overdue. we had a taste of it a few winters ago when the steamship leased the fast Ferry to fill in. 20 min trips!!!

Lorraine Edgartown

James, you are right. I have been talking and writing about a passenger fast ferry, just make round trips, buy tickets online, step off a bus, a car, or shanks mare, or yak bak, and Bob's your Uncle, a fast ferry to the island. Let us see it happen. It makes sense. But, then, again, perhaps that is the monkey wrench in the whole shebang.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/15/2022 - 07:36

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Nancy Rose Steinbock Edgartown

People are being disenfranchised -- good renters or people who keep the island running with their hard work of cleaning, gardening, landscaping, carpentry, etc., as investors buy up properties. They are already working but in danger of losing their homes as owners decide to sell to make a significant profit and do not extend the leases of these folks. It's a heartbreak. The Vineyard has enough wealth to support those with affordable housing to those who are not rich but who make their lives more comfortable.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/15/2022 - 09:13

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Dean Charette

Why does this come as no surprise. As more and more people come here searching the American dream and high Summer wages the grandiose vision of the Island is clouded. Then the folks are here. They may survive the summer but then here comes the winter. Add to that folks who probably think they have a place to stay for a while so they decide to start a family and that dream comes crashing down. Heres the deal. The rich are buying houses and not renting to Islanders in the winter. The Land Bank is buying up land (to protect it i get it) so no land to build. There is a slow effort albeit way to late to build and/or convert homes to affordable. When the land on County Road was available it should have been used for apartments. Hundreds of them. The land next to the ice rink (think owned by the owner of Vineyard Grocer) can also be used for apartments and he has proposed that. But alas, no apartments on the Vineyard that will ruin the charm. Not like homes with broken down cars in their yards don't. The way you get ahead is to build. Falmouth is doing just that and they're down to a 5 year wait time. All the surrounding towns on the Cape are. Build some beautiful apartments and tuck them away so they don't ruin your grandiose vision of what the Island is supposed to look like or, expect more homeless. This is not 1950 where you could camp in Katama. That land is long gone to multi-million dollar homes. The more people come here to work and fall in love and decide to stay when staying should be the furthest thing from their minds, the more people will end up homeless. Or, living in sheds using camp ovens for heat or moldy basements with mice or cold garages. Or.. renting rooms for $1000-$1300. There have been some success stories here. Immigrants chasing a dream and building businesses and buying million dollar homes. They are sadly overshadowed by the people who cannot attain their dreams and end up at the mercy of Poor Martha. Please, build apartment complexes and save the Island.

Susan of OB CT

building apartments is not th solutions -- I know of an immigrant who found housing for himself under the porch of a non-winterized porch. "Attain their dreams" -- the better solution, per prior respondents, a commuter options from New Bedford/etc. Other necessity is to stop the approval of Mega-mansions....those homes that are underutilized for many months of the year,

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 03/16/2022 - 23:01

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Amy Edgartown

Every island town could have, and should have built a similar housing development to Morgan Woods.. it’s been 15 years..we are so thankful for Ted Morgan- a true leader & steward of this Island. Step up town leaders - follow Ted’s example.

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