- Local every day in
State To End Program Placing Homeless Families in Woburn Hotels
The program has placed families in two Woburn hotels.
The state Dept. of Housing and Community Development plans to end a program that places homeless families in hotels, including two in Woburn, according to the Boston Globe.
The program, which started during the 1980s, would end by June 30, 2014.
According to the most recent state figures, Woburn housed about 50 families in the Holiday Inn and Extended Stay Hotel in 2011. However, when the Holiday Inn was revamped into a Crowne Plaza, the program was discontinued at that particular hotel.
| School-Aged Children | Non-School-Aged Children | Total Children | Total Families | |
| Holiday Inn (2011) | 19 | 45 | 64 | 45 |
| Extended Stay (2011) | 2 | 2 | 4 | 4 |
| Woburn (2011) | 21 | |||
| Woburn (2011) | 47 | |||
| Woburn (2011) | 68 | |||
| Woburn (2011) | 49 |
With the closing of the program in 2013, the state plans to bolster efforts to find permanent housing and prevent homelessness, according to the Globe. However, housing advocates fear permanent housing for program participants may never be found, according to the Globe.
The decision comes as the economic downturn stretched the program to its 2,000 hotel room limit, according to the Globe.
Aaron Gornstein, undersecretary for DHCD, told the Globe the program is not an "efficient" use of taxpayer money.
While the program gives needy families shelter, it leaves them without places for their children to play or to cook a meal, and burdens taxpayers with a hefty bill, according to the Globe. The program costs state taxpayers $45 million annually.
The program also places families in hotels in Framingham, Chelmsford, Burlington, Bedford, Danvers, Malden, Marlborough, Natick, Northborough, Tewksbury, Woburn and Framingham, according to the Massachusetts State Auditor's Office.
The number of families in hotels statewide has jumped over the last two years: In December 2010, 771 families were in hotels rooms; by December of last year, around 1,700 families were in hotels.
Earnhardt
12:57 pm on Saturday, January 5, 2013
Buh bye.....
rebecca green
3:28 am on Sunday, January 6, 2013
does this include welfareputting families in hotels as well, it would save a lot of money. back in the 80's welfare was paying over 400 dollars a week for people to stay in hotels in malden and saugus, still giving them food stamps (though they could not cook in the rooms)
june mackenzie
9:55 am on Sunday, January 6, 2013
Don't people who can't cook still need to eat?
R U Kiddingme
9:50 am on Monday, January 7, 2013
Why don't we focus on getting the prostitutes out of the Red Roof Inn before we worry about throwing homeless people on the streets?