A new Carroll Gardens homeless shelter built on old relationships

Site of the proposed shelter. Katia Kelly at Pardon Me For Asking
8:37 am Oct. 15, 20128
A year ago, after the loss of state funding, the Bloomberg administration ended its signature initiative to combat homelessness, a rent subsidy program called Advantage.
The policy change has been predictably devastating to the people who relied on the program, and who have since crowded into an already overburdened shelter system.
At a Sept. 18 hearing, City Councilman Brad Lander—an affordable housing expert—sharply criticized the city’s Department of Homeless Services, later telling The Wall Street Journal: “There was nothing new offered to confront a big crisis.”
D.H.S. claimed it had a plan to deal with the space crunch, though. Last week, Lander learned about part of it: a 170-bed homeless shelter, which could open within weeks, right in his district.
This facility, one of several to spark NIMBYish reactions in affluent neighborhoods in recent months, is being considered by city officials under conditions of strict secrecy.
And based on the scant documentary record, this particular one looks like something of an inside job, as D.H.S. prepares to award a no-bid contract worth millions of dollars to the agency's recently departed commissioner, who appears, in turn, to be renting the building that will house the shelter from one of his newly established nonprofit's own board members.
THE PROPOSED FACILITY, AT 165 WEST 9TH STREET, IS AT THE SOUTHERN end of Carroll Gardens, around the corner from a Mexican slow-food restaurant, a wine store and several expensive condo buildings. The disclosure of the plans has sparked both predictable hand-wringing about crime and vagrancy, and—this being Brooklyn—an earnest anti-NIBMY backlash. (“I am overjoyed,” one poster wrote on the BoCoCa Parents message board, “at the possibility that 160-170 individuals will have a warm place to sleep.”)
Lander, however, is concerned—both about the substance of the proposal, which has yet to be publicly revealed, and the opacity of the city’s approval process.
“Every important element of oversight or input is missing,” Lander told me.
The neighborhood first learned of the potential plans on Oct. 4, via a terse one-page letter from Aguila Incorporated, a nonprofit that operates more than two dozen homeless shelters around the city via contracts with the D.H.S. The notification left many questions unanswered; for instance, how is the bidder planning to fit 170 people—single men, apparently—into the structure, a vacant 10-unit apartment building?
When I contacted Heather Janik, a D.H.S. spokeswoman, she said that the agency would not reveal further details.
“We don’t discuss the nature of proposals when they’re in the procurement process,” she said.
In other words, the city will not discuss what it’s considering until the decision is made—and according to Lander, that could happen very quickly.
The city “has decided to proceed with this proposal under ‘emergency contract’ rules, which only require 30 days community notice,” the councilman said in an email.
Janik refused to confirm this, but in the homeless advocacy community, the assumption is that the facility will be open for the winter—meaning the first residents may arrive within weeks.
The move is part of a wider Bloomberg administration push to disperse homeless shelters out of impoverished neighborhoods, in keeping with the city’s “fair share” regulations—rules that, ironically, Lander has loudly advocated. Similar debates have erupted in Chelsea, Greenpoint and the Upper West Side, but under the emergency procedures, public opposition has mostly been limited to post-facto griping.
Lander stresses that he is sympathetic to the city’s needs, and not opposed on principle to the idea of homeless services in his district.
“They need a lot more shelter beds,” he said.
Some 46,000 New Yorkers—including 19,000 children—now depend on the system, an increase of almost 25 percent since last year.
As demand for space has risen, the crisis has created some unusual opportunities for landlords to profit by packing poor people into their buildings. At a controversial shelter on 95th Street on the Upper West Side, for example, the city is paying $3,300 a month per unit, including services—more than the current median rent for market-rate apartments in Manhattan. That shelter is also operated by Aguila, which appears to be one of the most aggressive players in this lucrative low-end real estate market.
Aguila, founded in 2001, has a checkered history. For years, it was run by the son of former Bronx assemblyman Peter Rivera, a Democratic machine politician with a history of allegedly steering contracts to nonprofits run by his associates. (The Daily News and Village Voice thoroughly investigated the allegations, which led to a corruption indictment against one of Rivera’s friends, though not the assemblyman himself, who has since been appointed to head the state Department of Labor by Governor Andrew Cuomo.)
Last year, Comptroller John Liu accused Aguila of over-billing the city by nearly a million dollars for its services. D.H.S. claimed its internal figures showed a discrepancy of only $542, and Janik said the nonprofit is now operating under new management.
Janik should know, because Aguila’s new boss is her department’s old one: former D.H.S. commissioner Robert Hess. Since leaving government service in 2010, after four years in the Bloomberg Administration, Hess has followed a well-trodden path into public contracting, starting an organization called Housing Solutions USA in July of 2011. It has since merged with Aguila, and Rivera’s son—also named Peter—is no longer listed as the executive director of the nonprofit.
Aguila operates the shelters under four city contracts, according to to Janik, two of which were awarded since Hess took control of the merged entity.*
Janik would not comment on the cost of the Carroll Gardens project, but a considerably smaller—100-bed—contract for a Bronx facility came with an attached price of $21 million, according to the Post.
Neither Hess nor a publicity contact for Housing Solutions USA, Jennifer Lim, would comment about the Carroll Gardens proposal, referring all questions to D.H.S. When asked via email for a copy of Housing Solutions USA’s most recent tax return—which nonprofits are required by federal law to make available for public inspection—Hess replied to me, mistakenly thinking he was writing to his colleague Lim:
“Jen, tell him again that all requests need to be made through DHS,” Hess wrote. “Nothing more.”
Lim later wrote to say that since it was only 15 months old, Housing Solutions USA has yet to file a tax return. Such documents typically disclose a nonprofit’s revenues and expenses, as well as the identities and compensation of executives and board members.
Advocates for the homeless say Hess has maintained a decent reputation, despite presiding over a turbulent period at D.H.S. That has done little to ease the concerns of Lander and others about the prospect of overcrowded conditions in the seven-story apartment building, which has its own troubled history.
Originally designed as luxury condos by the notorious architect Robert Scarano, the project languished for nearly a decade, reportedly due to issues with the Buildings Department, which has since banned Scarano from filing permits due to alleged malfeasance. A certificate of occupancy was finally issued for the building in 2010, even as the surrounding stretch of Court Street filled with bakeries and bistros, driving up rents and sale prices.




Housing Solutions USA plans to operate a shelter for individuals at 9th Street but they have no experience running shelters for individuals. They currently only operate shelters for families which are much easier to operate than shelters for individuals and don't have many of the issues that go along with shelters for individuals. Their lack of experience creates too much of a risk to the community because a poorly run shelter for individuals will inflict great harm to the community and its residents. Go to their website at http://www.housingsolutionsusa.org/housing-programs#tab-1 and you'll see that every one of their shelters is identified as being for families, not individuals. So it's either true that they have no experience with shelters for individuals or they are lying to those communities about the true nature of their current shelters. Either answer should disqualify them from operating a shelter in our community.
Very well written and detailed account of this inside job in the making. Unbelievable.
It seems to me there is corruption and fraud afoot, and there should be investigation into Hess, DHS, and John Liu (who signs off on these debacles). One suggestion, vote out all your uber-progressive politicians who push for these developments. If you have any question about that, just take a look at what Gale Brewer is doing to the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
Housing Solutions USA plans to operate a shelter for individuals at 9th Street but they have no experience running shelters for individuals. They currently only operate shelters for families which are much easier to operate than shelters for individuals and don't have many of the issues that go along with shelters for individuals. Their lack of experience creates too much of a risk to the community because a poorly run shelter for individuals will inflict great harm to the community and its residents. Go to their website at http://www.housingsolutionsusa.org/housing-programs#tab-1 and you'll see that every one of their shelters is identified as being for families, not individuals. So it's either true that they have no experience with shelters for individuals or they are lying about the true nature of their current shelters. Either answer should disqualify them from operating a shelter in our community.
It would be wise to state that 170 men in a 10 unit building is equal to 17 people per room. The building cannot safely hold that many people. They were built as lux condos, so so the math, 10 units with a family of 4. That is 40 people. How is it the Housing solutions got around occupancy and the no hotel zoning that close to the BQE?
This is a residential community of families and lots of young children. There is a preschool just around the corner. A men's shelter is a total miss-match.
This facility should be used for homeless families with children; and filled with a reasonable number of people.
This is not about any rational placement of planned homeless facilities, this is the city bailing out a improperly build building and sticking it to the local community that isn't the mayor's favorite by any measure.
Do some more research and you will discover that Wertman is just a front man for Alan Lapes.
Do some more research and you will discover that Wertman is just a front man for Alan Lapes.