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Examining the ambiguous keepers of the hotel shelter list

Examining the ambiguous keepers of the hotel shelter list The hotel shelter program is a highlight of the City’s homelessness solution strategy, galvanized by the effects of the pandemic. In a December press release last year, the City boasted that it created 2,300 new temporary shelter and hotel spaces for physical distancing, and their Streets to Homes team, part of the Shelter, Support, and Housing Administration, or SSHA, helped move more than 1,100 encampment dwellers inside. So, who is the keeper of the hotel shelter list? And how do referrals get through and who manages this intake? By calling the municipal, 24-hour non-emergency line, 311, I spoke with an SSHA staff member in the Streets to Homes team who told me that the criteria for the hotels were that the person showed “Priority” and “Requirement” needs. Priority means they live in one of the four main encampments in the city: Moss Park, Alexandra Park, Trinity Bellwoods, or Lamport Stadium. Requirement needs

UNMH sees uptick in reports of child abuse as schools reopen

UNMH sees uptick in reports of child abuse as schools reopen © KOAT UNMH sees uptick in reports of child abuse as schools reopen One month into schools reopening across New Mexico, UNMH is seeing an increase in reports of child abuse. A doctor at UNM Children’s Hospital said they’ve already seen more patients, primarily infants and young children, this school year compared to all of last school year. She believes the pandemic has had a lot to do with it.Sign up for our Newsletters “Any time adults are under stress which certainly is the case during a pandemic, that leads to risk for children,” Dr. Leslie Strickler said.

Editorial: Reach NM offers new helping hand for kids in distress » Albuquerque Journal

.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... The state Children, Youth & Families Department has introduced a much-needed, innovative lifeline for New Mexico kids who may be suffering from abuse and neglect – or are aware of someone else who is. Knowing that youth today are most comfortable communicating via text message, CYFD recently launched a first-in-the-nation text-based platform that allows reporting directly to CYFD’s Statewide Central Intake. “We tried to recreate the #SAFE experience, where people call that number from their cellphones…,” said spokesman Charlie Moore-Pabst. “Now, they have the option of reporting to Central Intake with a text message at 505-591-9444.” It’s no surprise that reports of child abuse and neglect in New Mexico and elsewhere dropped precipitously with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Outside family and caregivers, kids spend more time at school than anywhere else. And with sc

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