Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Austin provides shelter in freezes but not in triple-digit heat – and advocates want change


Photo by Renee Dominguez/KUT. People experiencing homelessness line up to receive a free breakfast at Trinity Center in downtown Austin last month.

Monday, August 21, 2023 by Andrew Weber, KUT

Austin’s triple-digit temperatures – 44 days in a row as of Sunday – have been near-unbearable for people living outdoors. And with the heat streak likely to continue well into next week, a group of nonprofits is asking the city to set up emergency shelter on a more consistent basis.

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The group wrote a letter to officials Friday, asking the city to open temporary shelters to get people out of extreme heat. Austin has a program to shelter people in the winter, but not in the summer.

Andi Brauer, outreach coordinator for Central Presbyterian Church downtown, said she understands the city has extended resources to unhoused people at cooling centers. But operating hours vary, and there’s confusion about whether people experiencing homelessness are even allowed to use the facilities.

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“It’s already too little, too late,” she said. “This should’ve started happening in June when the 100-plus temperatures started. … More and more people are going to show up in emergency rooms. It’s going to cost the city more money. It’s likely people will die. They’ll get sick, for sure, there’s no question.”

St. David’s Episcopal Church and Street Youth Ministry also signed the letter.

The city is setting up a 300-bed emergency shelter in Southeast Austin that is expected to be up and running before the end of the month. City Council also OK’d a plan to lease the site of the former Salvation Army downtown shelter, which is expected to open by September and house roughly 150 people.

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Still, Brauer said, the city should set up a program similar to one it uses in the winter; emergency shelters open when temperatures dip below freezing overnight. That system currently is undergoing a review, however, after issues during February’s freeze.

Brauer argued the summer heat poses more of a threat to people experiencing homelessness than cold weather, and summers are only getting hotter.

“If you look at the greater health risk to our community, it’s the hot weather,” she said. “We need attention to both. I’m not saying that one should shut out the other.”

Deaths associated with heat-related illness are more common than deaths during the cold. Last year, the state saw the highest number of heat-related deaths since 1999, according to The Texas Tribune.

This story was produced as part of the Austin Monitor’s reporting partnership with KUT.

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This article First appeared in austinmonitor

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