March 5, 2015

Progress shown in fight to end homelessness

On a brutally frigid January night, a posse of volunteers spread out across Chester County, searching for residents in need of appropriate shelter.

The effort, part of a national initiative called the Point in Time Count, found that 615 people were experiencing homelessness in the county on the night of Jan. 28 and early morning of Jan. 29, according to a report compiled by the Chester County Department of Community Development.

The annual Point in Time Count, which is mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, helps to determine the extent of homelessness throughout the country. The definition of homeless includes individuals and families who are residing in emergency shelters and transitional living facilities, as well as unsheltered individuals on the street or in places not fit for sleeping.

Within Chester County, the Point in Time Count is one component of understanding homelessness. It is also part of a proactive strategy called “Decade to Doorways: The Community’s Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness in Chester County.

Michael Hackman, the Decade to Doorways administrator, said numbers for this year’s Point in Time Count declined from last year, suggesting that the Decade to Doorways strategy is having a positive impact, especially ConnectPoints, Chester County’s homeless coordinated assessment system.

“Having ConnectPoints – a ‘single point of entry’ for individuals and families seeking emergency shelter and other homeless prevention services – has helped us tremendously over the past year,” said Hackman.

Previously, individuals seeking shelter and other services had to make multiple phone calls to determine what was available in the county. Now, a single call to 1-800-935-3181 provides an overview of housing resources, such as which shelters have beds available, etc.

In Chester County on the night of the Point in Time Count, 15 persons were found without shelter, 233 were residing in emergency shelters and 367 were in transitional shelters. Of the individuals who were sheltered, 17 percent were under the age of 18, 56 percent were between the ages of 18 and 54, and 27 percent were age 55 and older.

The communities where the 15 unsheltered individuals were counted included West Chester (seven individuals), Exton (five), and Kennett Square, Phoenixville and Devon (one in each location), Hackman said.

In 2014, the count identified 684 people as homeless, which represented an increase from 2013. Thirty-nine people were found without shelter, 237 were located in emergency shelters, and 345 in transitional shelters. The communities where the 39 unsheltered individuals were counted included 20 in West Chester, 11 in Kennett Square, five in Phoenixville, two in the Coatesville/Downingtown area and one in the Paoli/Malvern area.

In 2015, 92 percent of total available beds in emergency shelters were occupied during the Point in Time Count in 2015, compared with 85 percent occupancy in 2014, said Hackman.   “This increase in percentage of occupancy is a result of the efficiencies of the ConnectPoints system, and not a reflection on an increase in the number of homeless,” he added.

Hackman said the Point in Time Count plays a vital role in helping Chester County assess the level of homeless services needed on a given night. “It also provides a baseline for measuring the resources that we need throughout the year, and is instrumental in determining the congressional homeless funding that we receive,” he said.

This year, 88 volunteers from government, educational and civic organizations took part in the Chester County count, divided into 17 teams that canvassed a geographical spread of the county.

A report on the Point in Time Count will be one element of a presentation made to Chester County Decade to Doorways partners and stakeholders at a community-networking meeting on Wednesday, March 18, at 3 p.m. at the Brandywine Center in Coatesville. This event will also reveal the 2014 homeless year-end data, and include an update on ConnectPoints.

 

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

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‘Walkable Chadds Ford’ plan marches on

The first public presentation of a proposed master plan for a walkable Chadds Ford Village is set for March 18. In preparation for that presentation — to be held 7:30 p.m. at the Chadds Ford Historical Society — the steering committee reviewed a draft of that plan two weeks ahead of time.

Some of the recommendations include possible zoning changes, adding a traffic light at Route 1 and South Creek Road and changing Station Way Road from one-way northbound to one-way southbound.

Landscape architect Peter Simone, of Simone Collins, the consultant for the plan, gave the committee a PowerPoint presentation during a 90-minute meeting in the Environmental Management Center at the Brandywine Conservancy on March 4.

Simone defined the actual village area as the stretch of Route 1 from Ring Road in Chadds Ford Township to Fairville Road — at Chadds Ford Elementary School — in Pennsbury Township.

He also said there would be “gateway transition zones” leading into the village area.

Driving lanes would be narrowed from 14 feet wide to 11 feet and speed limits would be lowered to 45 mph or slower. Helping to slow traffic through the village would be landscaped medians.

Bicycle and pedestrian lanes would be added on the south side of Route 1 — the northbound lanes from Fairville to Ring Road — and shoulders would be added to both sides of the road. In addition, Simone said, there could be “pedestrian scaled” lighting for safety, as well as pedestrian activated crossing lights.

Among the suggested zoning changes, Simone said rezoning North Creek Road from residential to B business would allow for more businesses while keeping residential use as a pre-existing nonconforming use.

Rezoning Station Way Road to business is also suggested. Another suggestion is to rezone the LI, light industrial, area of Route 1 and South Creek Road. Simone said that could become either a residential district or get a special open space zoning designation.

He also said reducing the 75-foot front yard setback along Route 1 would be more in keeping with a friendly village feel.

Chadds Ford Township Open Space Committee Chairman Deb Reardon suggested that the committee drop the rezoning idea for use of Route 1 properties, at least for the time being.

Changing the one-way traffic flow on Station Way Road — and including a walkway — adding pedestrian crossings on South Creek Road and adding a traffic signal at South Creek Road and Route 1 could help create a “Chadds Ford Commons” area to the village, Simone said.

He said the area could be a place where people can walk after a dinner at a local restaurant or sit down and have some ice cream. Station Way could also be closed off for a public event, he said.

Other ideas include having a pedestrian walkway along the west side of North Creek Road from the Chadds Ford Historical Society to Route 1 at Hank’s Place. Included in that idea are boardwalk or overlook sections at the little parking area across from the Sanderson Museum and another in the rear of the parking lot at Hank’s.

Simone said those areas would give pedestrians a better view of the wetland and provide a place for artists and photographers to do their thing.

The draft plan also shows walking trails between the Brandywine River Museum of Art and the Kuerner Farm and another trail crossing the Brandywine Creek along the old, unused railroad tracks at the museum to Fairville Road.

Areas of responsibility — which governmental or private entities would do what — is still to be determined as are cost estimates to implement the various suggestions.

A pubic meeting to present the final plan is tentatively scheduled for May 20.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

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