Thursday, November 18, 2021

City doing the homeless hotel shuffle with tenants displaced by Hurricane Ida

https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/jg1oyQnDUagczkq7lUbGZxVzN5Y=/0x0:3000x2000/920x613/filters:focal(1875x250:2355x730):format(webp)/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/70152437/111621_ramos_ida_families.0.jpg

 THE CITY

Families flooded out of Queens homes by the record-breaking Ida rainstorm may soon be forced by the city to relocate from a Radisson hotel near Kennedy Airport and move a borough away.

The looming trip to one of two hotels in downtown Brooklyn could take place before Thanksgiving, the Ida evacuees say they’ve been told by the city Department of Housing Preservation and Development.

“We just want more time,” Eileen Bendoyro, 52, said Tuesday after being informed she and her 13-year-old son Christopher would have to move to Brooklyn after staying at the South Jamaica Radisson since the epic Sept. 1 storm.

 Our activities are in Queens. We have small kids, babies, people who are disabled — to go to Brooklyn, it’s too far,” she said of the group still at the airport hotel.

Bendoyro’s basement apartment in East Elmhurst flooded, destroying nearly everything, she said. A week later, President Joe Biden and other elected officials visited the neighborhood, stopping at an alleyway around the corner from her apartment.

But the visit didn’t help her find a place to stay. She was among 20 families still at the hotel on Thursday when HPD told them they’d have to move by Monday, she said.

By Tuesday, just nine families remained, and they were then told by city officials they could get an extra five days at the Radisson. 

 An HPD spokesman said the city has provided emergency quarters to more than 380 families since the remnants of Hurricane Ida hit and is working to get people into permanent housing.

“We’ve secured extended stays in hotels in downtown Brooklyn for many of those who remain in our care, and will continue to work with the families staying at hotels in Queens to get them back on their feet,” the spokesman, Anthony Proia, said in a statement.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

And at night these bureaucrats go home, pat themselves on the back and tell each other and their kids that they're wonderful caring human beings, and with that fallacy planted with the sub conscience they manage to sleep literally like innocent babies. Phony motherfuckers...

NPC_translator said...

How about they all go back to where they came from? These third-world invaders are always whining about how terrible things are in America, but it's somehow never terrible enough for them to go back home.