Posted on June 21, 2018 by Jacquelyn Simone Momentum continues to build for the Coalition’s House Our Future NY campaign. We are calling on Mayor de Blasio to increase the number of permanent affordable housing units set aside for homeless New Yorkers to 30,000 of his 300,000-unit Housing New York 2.0 plan, with 24,000 of those units to be created through new construction. This commitment to affordable housing is imperative to help the more than 62,000 New Yorkers – including 23,000 kids – sleeping in shelters each night. Dozens of those boys and girls participated in our NY Kids Need Housing march to City Hall earlier this month, and hundreds of concerned New Yorkers have already added their names to the House Our Future NY petition. The campaign has garnered endorsements from 57 organizations, many of which sent a letter to Mayor de Blasio on April 23rd. Now, a group of 32 Council Members, 4 Borough Presidents, the Public Advocate, and the Comptroller have echoed this request in a new letter asking the Mayor to set aside 10 percent of his housing plan, or 30,000 units of permanent housing, for homeless New Yorkers. Sam Raskin wrote about the housing request and the elected officials’ letter for Politico: A slew of New York City elected officials have signed on to a letter urging Mayor Bill de Blasio to step up his commitment to combating homelessness by doubling the amount of units apportioned to the city’s homeless population. “With a record 63,000 people – including nearly 24,000 children – sleeping in shelters each night, it is clear that more must be done,” reads the letter, signed by potential 2021 mayoral candidates Comptroller Scott Stringer, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams and Public Advocate Tish James, along with 32 Council members. “We must use every available tool at our disposal to reduce the number of New Yorkers relegated to shelters and the streets, and so we are asking the City to double the number of deeply subsidized affordable housing units targeted specifically to families and individuals in shelters.” De Blasio has made increasing New York’s affordable housing stock the central focus of his administration, but has drawn criticism for his handling of homelessness. Among the critics has been the Coalition For The Homeless — the group that organized the letter. In January, the coalition released a report in which they delivered a similar assessment of the mayor’s record on reducing homelessness. “Mayor de Blasio’s record on homelessness has been mixed – and in some instances wholly inadequate, despite some notably positive steps,” the group said in the report. Further, the coalition said de Blasio’s efforts on homelessness were “sluggish,” because they fail “to attack the problem at its core.” Currently, the mayor’s housing plan aims to create or preserve 300,000 units of affordable housing, 15,000 of which will be dedicated for homeless households — an amount the letter labels a “paltry 5 percent.” Despite the roughly 7,500 units of housing for the homeless the city has built and preserved since the start of his mayoralty, and 1,400 homeless placements, the letter says de Blasio’s performance on the homelessness front is “nowhere near the level of production necessary to meaningfully reduce record homelessness in New York City.” In lieu of his current program, the city officials are requesting that the mayor raise the amount to 30,000 or 10 percent of added units — double that of the existing plan. Additionally, the letter states, the lion’s share of the units set aside for homeless individuals are units being preserved as affordable, not newly built ones, so it requests the city create 24,000 of the 30,000 total units.