Miami-Dade is moving elderly residents out of homeless shelters and into hotels
He said a staffer at the Miami Chapman center tested positive for COVID-19, raising the alarm of an outbreak there. Book said the aim is to move all elderly people out of homeless facilities across the county, as well as people in that age group living without shelter.
"If you don't move on a dime, you risk broader spread and the potential for deep loss of life," said Book, chairman of the
Representatives of the two hotels were not available for interviews Thursday.
The bulk hotel reservations are part of a broad effort by
"In our mind we're saying we need to hold onto these for three months," Rollason said of the hotel agreements.
Governments across the country are turning to hotels to provide lodging for homeless populations, healthcare workers and public-safety employees at high risk of exposure from COVID-19.
And while some hotels initially balked at being temporary housing for COVID-19 patients, those concerns are fading as the lodging industry settles in to a historic downturn.
"There was a little bit of reluctance early on," said
People experiencing homelessness are the main focus of
Homeless shelters risk widespread outbreaks when a single resident becomes infected in open, barracks-style sleeping quarters, so hotel rooms are a way to provide isolation.
"If you leave them in that condition, you run the chance of it running through there like a nursing home," Rollason said.
Rollason said the 200 rooms at the
"We're making sure we account for all these rooms. We had to buy the whole place," Rollason said.
"We were just on the phone this morning," Rollason said, opening the agreements while speaking to the
Rollason said both hotels still have guests that need to checked out before the county can move people in.
Rollason said the county has looked at renting seven hotels with more than 800 rooms in all if housing needs soar during the pandemic.
"It's for a surge," he said in an interview last week. "We're the pessimists."
Book said the Trust also has agreements with an assisted living facility in
He said the Trust plans to submit for reimbursement of all its costs to the federal government. He's also pushing the state
"I've got 470 ... damn employees that have got to be tested. They're in daily contact with the population. They've got to be tested," he said. "And we've got an inordinate number of senior citizens that are unsheltered."
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