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 City Hall protest for College Pt. shelter plan 
 BY MARK HALLUM 
 The weather couldn’t stop  
 scores of College Point residents  
 from making the long trip to  
 Lower Manhattan to protest a  
 proposed homeless shelter in  
 the community. 
 The protesters gathered  
 on the steps of City Hall on  
 Jan.  13  demanding  that  the  
 city Department of Homeless  
 Services come up with another  
 way to help homeless residents  
 in Queens. 
 The agency has proposed  
 opening a shelter for up to 200  
 men at a site located at 127-03  
 20th Ave. 
 For months, College Point  
 residents,  including  Jennifer  
 Shannon,  have  said  the  plan  
 simply doesn’t work for the  
 community. 
 At Sunday’s protest,  
 Shannon repeated her concerns  
 that  the  community  offers  
 little public transportation  
 and medical services — both  
 of which are necessary to  
 accommodate the homeless  
 population  that  the  shelter  
 would serve. 
 “College Point really  
 is on the most northern tip  
 of Queens, and there really  
 is  nothing  there.  To  get  to  
 any  service,  it’s  45  minutes,”  
 Shannon said, referring to the  
 three-to-five unreliable bus  
 routes available.” 
 One concern Shannon  
 AN AMAZIN’ BLOOD DRIVE 
 Mr. Met encourages guests to give blood at the New York Mets’ annual Winter Blood Drive hosted  
 at Citi Field.  Photo by Bruce Adler 
 voiced was that the residents at  
 the facility will not be allowed  
 to  stay  in  the  building  during  
 the day and that medical  
 assistance is sparse. 
 City Department of  
 Homeless Services spokesman  
 Isaac McGinn denied the  
 claim, explaining that this is a  
 misconception that arose from  
 the fact that residents are sent  
 into common areas of the facility  
 to engage in job development  
 and other programs while  
 sleeping  quarters  are  cleaned  
 by staff. 
 Shannon  admitted  that  
 DHS  had  not  said  this  is  
 its  policy,  but  that  it  had  
 been  in  contact  with  other  
 communities  who  claimed  
 homeless  residents  were  
 turned out during the day. 
 “If we get sick in College  
 Point, we have to go to Bayside,  
 we have to go to Whitestone —  
 we’ve got no services,” Shannon  
 said. “No train, no precinct,  
 no hospital. So how are they  
 helping these men?” 
 But like many other  
 homeless shelter facilities  
 established by the city, McGinn  
 confirmed  that  the  College  
 Point shelter will have medical  
 services provided on-site as well  
 as mental health assistance. 
 “Our  only  thing  is  this  is  
 just a really horrible location,”  
 Shannon Said. “This is not  
 a NIMBY thing, it’s just not  
 safe. It’s just not safe to put 200  
 men transitioning – many of  
 them,  probably  most  of  them  
 from prison – in the middle of  
 a community surrounded by  
 our schools.” 
 Michael Deng, who also  
 helps organize the opposition to  
 the shelter, echoed Shannon in  
 the  claim  that  those  opposing  
 the College Point shelter had  
 been villainized by those in  
 favor, which they viewed as an  
 unfair assessment. 
 “We’re talking about a  
 very  small  number  of  people  
 who go through homelessness  
 versus a community of 80,000  
 people, 28,000 households,  
 more  than  5,000  school kids,”  
 Deng said. “It couldn’t be a  
 worst site. Five schools in  
 the middle of the commercial  
 center of College Point. We’re  
 not against homeless, we have  
 our own homeless we are  
 taking care of.” 
 There are currently an  
 estimated  63,000  to  70,000  
 homeless  individuals  in  the  
 city, a situation which has been  
 treated as a crisis by Mayor Bill  
 de Blasio. The College Point  
 location is slated to be another  
 addition  in  his  Turning  of  
 the Tide on Homelessness  
 initiative.  
 Vol. 28 No. 3  52 total pages 
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