Tag: homeless

  • Massive Fire Leaves Two Families Homeless In JK

    Massive Fire Leaves Two Families Homeless In JK

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    SRINAGAR: A massive overnight blaze rendered two families homeless in Kanyari Payeen area of Sonawari in North Kashmir’s Bandipora District

    Reports said that during the intervening night of Sunday-Monday, two residential houses of Habibullah Kaloo & Noori Begum got completely damaged along with belongings in the mysterious overnight fire incident.

    Cowshed along with livestock was also charred to death in the incident, reports added.

    Meanwhile, the victims have urged the administration to take the first hand assessment of the incident and provide the compensation to the fire victims. (GNS)

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    #Massive #Fire #Leaves #Families #Homeless

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Photos: Descendants of those who served Nizam left homeless in Hyderabad

    Photos: Descendants of those who served Nizam left homeless in Hyderabad

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    The holy month of Ramzan has begun, but for 35 Muslim families in Hyderabad’s Bistiwada area, it’s a month of hardships and struggles. These families, who are descendants of those who served the Nizam, are spending their days and nights on the streets, observing the Ramzan fast on the road.

    Last month, the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) pulled down their dwellings, leaving them homeless. The families, including children and senior citizens, are living with their belongings spread out on the streets.

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    WhatsApp Image 2023 04 01 at 1.03.27 PM

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    #Photos #Descendants #served #Nizam #left #homeless #Hyderabad

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ramzan fast on Hyderabad road: Descendants of those who served Nizam left homeless

    Ramzan fast on Hyderabad road: Descendants of those who served Nizam left homeless

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    The holy month of Ramzan has begun, but for 35 Muslim families in Hyderabad’s Bistiwada area, it’s a month of hardships and struggles. These families, who are descendants of those who served the Nizam, are spending their days and nights on the streets, observing the Ramzan fast on the road.

    Last month, the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) pulled down their dwellings, leaving them homeless. The families, including children and senior citizens, are living with their belongings spread out on the streets.

    These families have been living in the Bistiwada area for six generations, and they have power bills, water bills, and property tax receipts. Fouzia Sultan, a member of one of the affected families, stated that the land was allotted to her grandfather, an ex-serviceman, in 1951. The property was registered in 1981, and the problem started in 1996 when it was claimed that the land belonged to the government.

    In 1996, a stay order was obtained, but on February 5 of this year, claimants to the property were asked to visit the GHMC office at Khairatabad. Upon reaching there, officials informed them that they had to leave the property along with their belongings by February 17.

    Though, the families started the process to seek legal remedy, on February 13, they were asked to leave the premises along with their belongings as the GHMC would pull down their dwellings on February 14. As informed, GHMC officials pulled down their dwellings on February 14, leaving them homeless.

    Families observing Ramzan fast on Hyderabad road

    Now, in the holy month of Ramzan, these families are facing immense difficulties. They have nowhere to go and are spending their days and nights on the street, observing the Ramzan fast on the road.

    As it is a heartbreaking situation, the government should take swift action to provide them with a roof over their heads.

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    #Ramzan #fast #Hyderabad #road #Descendants #served #Nizam #left #homeless

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Bangladesh: PM Hasina hands over 39,365 houses to homeless people

    Bangladesh: PM Hasina hands over 39,365 houses to homeless people

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    Dhaka: Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina handed over 39,365 houses to homeless people as part of her government’s Ashrayan-2 project which ensure housing for all landless persons.

    The premier handed over the houses in the fourth phase of the project through a program virtually from her official residence, Ganabhaban on Wednesday.

    She also declared seven districts and 159 upazilas as homeless- and landless-free, aising the total number of such districts to nine and upazilas to 211.

    Earlier, the Prime Minister had declared Panchagarh and Magura as homeless- and landless-free districts.

    Meanwhile, the total number of distributed houses under the project currently stands at 2,15,827.

    Since the Ashrayan-2 project, dubbed as ‘Sheikh Hasina Model’, in inclusive development, project sites have been developed with an integrated approach ensuring all civic amenities, including electricity, drinking water, schools, mosques and graveyards and lands for cultivation.

    Under the project, a total of 771,301 families have been rehabilitated so far since 1997.

    The number of rehabilitated people is 3,856,505.

    Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had first introduced the rehabilitation program for homeless people in 1972.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Bangladesh #Hasina #hands #houses #homeless #people

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Health + Hospitals advances new strategy to house homeless patients

    Health + Hospitals advances new strategy to house homeless patients

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    The proposal, which builds on Health + Hospitals’ existing Housing for Health initiative, was part of Mayor Eric Adams’ housing blueprint released in June 2022.

    The finance committee of Health + Hospitals’ board of directors voted Monday to approve the contract, sending it to the full board for a vote later this month.

    Health + Hospitals President and CEO Mitchell Katz said the initiative will borrow the “do what it takes” approach of the Los Angeles County Health Agency, where, as its former director, he launched a similar program that succeeded in housing more than 4,000 patients.

    The key was to find a way to move a patient who had only a $1,200 rent subsidy into a $1,300 unit, instead of telling the person that no housing was available, Katz cited as an example.

    “There were all of these people who were connected to housing case managers but didn’t have housing,” Katz said at the committee meeting Monday. “They would keep going to the same set of housing case managers, who’d say, ‘I’m sorry I don’t have any housing’, or, ‘You don’t have the right subsidy.’”

    Health + Hospitals has permanently housed nearly 500 patients on its own through its Housing for Health initiative, but the time-consuming work falls on social workers who are often overburdened and lack specific housing expertise.

    The process to house someone takes about nine months, Leora Jontef, the system’s assistant vice president of housing and real estate, said at the meeting.

    “This is very staffing-intensive,” Jontef said.

    Case in point: about 70 percent of the contract’s cost is staffing, she added.

    However, Coordinated Behavioral Care’s projected caseload will still be small compared to the need. Health + Hospitals said its goal is to secure 400 housing placements per year among the 600 patients receiving services. The system, meanwhile, cared for nearly 50,000 homeless patients last year.

    If its projected annual caseload is accurate, Health + Hospitals would be spending nearly $6,000 per patient over the potential four-year contract term. But officials said it would ultimately reduce emergency room and hospital utilization, pointing to research that links stable housing to better health outcomes.

    On average, patients experiencing homelessness visit emergency rooms three times more often than patients who have housing and stay in the hospital three times as long, according to the health system.

    Health + Hospitals cited an analysis it conducted of 54 patients housed by the Housing for Health program in the first half of 2021, which showed reductions in emergency department visits and the length of time someone was hospitalized in the year after they were placed in permanent housing.

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    #Health #Hospitals #advances #strategy #house #homeless #patients
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Kinzinger the ‘homeless Republican’ launches ad campaign against extremism

    Kinzinger the ‘homeless Republican’ launches ad campaign against extremism

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    “What we’re showing, by the video, is we’ve been programmed so much to believe that there’s only two choices to everything, that the other side is our enemy, that each event in the world should be seen through blue or red glasses,” Kinzinger said in an interview. “And we’re saying there’s a completely different way.”

    He said the nationwide campaign’s rollout, which will include TV, digital, billboard and guerilla marketing, will involve spending as close to “a quarter million [dollars] or more.” Shorter versions of the video will be displayed too.

    And as an example of what Kinzinger described as “performance art,” people have been spotted around Capitol Hill wearing the all-white costumes from the video. The former congressman said the display was also meant to draw attention to how many lawmakers on Capitol Hill were just “looking for that next social media opportunity, and not actually trying to do what their constituents need.”

    “It’s just another way to put that in perspective,” he added. “And it’s a little creepy too.”

    Kinzinger broke with his party after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, eventually serving as one of two Republicans on the select panel investigating the insurrection. He now identifies as a “homeless Republican.”

    Asked about the select panel’s unfinished business, he said his “working assumption” was that the Department of Justice and Senate Democrats might be able to carry on the investigative mantle from the select panel, which sunsetted at the end of the last Congress.

    “The Senate needs to pick up that slack,” he said.

    There were still investigative leads to pursue with the Secret Service, Kinzinger said, and with former President Donald Trump’s social media manager Dan Scavino, who had resisted the select panel’s subpoena and was eventually held in contempt of Congress. He did agree, however, that the Jan. 6 select committee had acted correctly in not further pushing former Vice President Mike Pence’s testimony, saying it would have taken up “a ton of energy for probably, as far as we were concerned, probably not a ton of information that’s useful.”

    “There’s a lot of those kinds of loose ends that, while I’m impressed at the committee’s ability to put together what we were able to do … if we had more time or infinite time, I think we could have done a lot more,” Kinzinger said.

    Kinzinger didn’t close the door to running for office again, though he said it wouldn’t be in the near future.

    “There’s a good chance I run for something again someday,” he said. “But I definitely need to take a good breather and a reset and focus on my wife and kid right now.”

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    #Kinzinger #homeless #Republican #launches #campaign #extremism
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Uttarakhand: Homeless Paingadh residents in pain amid authorities’ apathy

    Uttarakhand: Homeless Paingadh residents in pain amid authorities’ apathy

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    Dharali: The residents of Paingadh village in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district have been forced to vacate their homes and live in a government school, even as no proper action has been taken by the administration regarding their rehabilitation after the incidents of land subsidence and development of cracks in the village since the past few months.

    Minor cracks initially appeared at a peak located just above the village in October, 2021.

    However, on October 21, 2022, land subsidence occurred in the cracked area and huge boulders fell on the village, causing many houses to collapse in which four persons lost their lives.

    More than 40 families of the village, which is part of the old settlements on the left bank of Pindar river, remain homeless.

    A total of 90 families have lived in the village for generations.

    The affected residents alleged that they were forced to leave their homes and seek refuge in schools or live with their relatives.

    The only government primary school in the village has turned into a relief camp since the incident, which is now being run from the junior high school building.

    Tharali Block Education Officer, Adarsh Kumar, said that there is no proposal regarding resuming operations in the building so far.

    The District Disaster Management Officer, N.K. Joshi, said that a tin shed has been constructed in the village for the affected people.

    Joshi also said that the affected people of Paingadh have been compensated as per the rules and the process of rehabilitating 44 families is underway as per the displacement policy.

    Surendralal, an affected resident, said that the tin shed is being built at a place surrounded by pine forests without water and electricity.

    He added that the area cannot be accessed by foot and the constant danger of forest fire incidents will loom in the summer since dry pine leaves are highly inflammable.

    He alleged that a sum of Rs 5,000 was provided to the affected people around four months ago in the name of disaster relief.

    Gopal Dutt, another local, said that the state government is being requested to construct houses, but the matter has not progressed so far.

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    #Uttarakhand #Homeless #Paingadh #residents #pain #authorities #apathy

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Mehrauli demolitions: Delhi govt approves ‘immediate aid’ to families made homeless

    Mehrauli demolitions: Delhi govt approves ‘immediate aid’ to families made homeless

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    New Delhi: In the wake of the Delhi Development Authority’s recent demolition drive in south Delhi that rendered many homeless, the Delhi government on Thursday approved a proposal to provide ‘immediate aid and relief’ to affected families.

    Highlighting the severity of the situation, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has approved a proposal to provide affected families with tents, food, blankets, and other essential supplies. The file is now pending with LG V.K. Saxena for the approval.

    Delhi Revenue Minister Kailash Gahlot had sent a proposal to Chief Minister seeking to address the concerns of the affected families, who had lost their homes on Wednesday. In the proposal, he apprised the CM of the recent developments that had taken place in the matter so far.

    The DDA had initiated a large-scale demolition drive in the Ladha Sarai village under the pretext of a disputed demarcation of the Mehrauli Archaeological Park. The move left hundreds of persons without shelter or basic amenities.

    However, opposing the move by the DDA, the Delhi government intervened to stop the demolition and ordered a fresh demarcation of the disputed area through orders of Revenue Minister Gahlot.

    Meanwhile, LG Saxena on Tuesday directed the Delhi Development Authority to stall the ongoing demolition drive in these villages till further instructions.

    “The decision came after a delegation of residents of these villages met the LG and sought relief from the demolition drive while citing the anomalies in the demarcation of land in these areas, that was carried out by the AAP Government in 2021”, a statement from LG Secretariat had said.

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    #Mehrauli #demolitions #Delhi #govt #approves #aid #families #homeless

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )