Art and Documentary Photography - Loading Screen_Shot_2023-09-11_at_8.05.04_PM.png
News
for The New Yorker: A Journey from Homelessness to a Room of One’s Own
josé a. alvarado jr.
Sep 12, 2023
Location: New York, New York
What is the best way to combat homelessness? Research has shown that supportive housing, which provides tenants with long-term rent subsidies and support services, is highly effective-about 90 per cent of chronically homeless people who enter supportive housing remain housed after two years. 90 Sands Street, a newly renovated skyscraper in Brooklyn, offers 305 such units. Jennifer Egan reports from the facility, where she spends time with several tenants: Jessica (not her real name), who is frank about her heroin use and troubled history and spoke often of wanting to go back to school for culinary arts; Kenneth Roberson, a former gang member who lived in city shelters for years before moving in to 90 Sands; Russell Reavesbey, who often finds solace in his "one-in-a-million" cat and dreams of becoming a veterinary assistant. "Some 300 individuals who, for years, slept on stoops, steps, roofs, in stairwells, under scaffolding and under bridges, in abandoned buildings, outside Starbucks, inside Macy's, freezing through subzero New York winters and sweating on the sidewalk through broiling summers are presently housed," Egan writes. "Many still live in poverty, often without having finished high school, and are hobbled by disabilities and criminal records that make panhandling a more lucrative job than any other they might conceivably obtain (and getting a full-time job would terminate their benefits and thus their guarantee of housing). Some have problems that can't easily be solved, particularly after decades of turmoil have erased any memory of a stable baseline, if they ever had one. But it would seem inarguable that they have a better chance of meeting these challenges now, while housed, than they did while they were living on the streets."

Photographed for The New Yorker, with story written by Jennifer Egan.A Journey from Homelessness to a Room of One’s Own
At a supportive-housing facility, chronically unhoused New Yorkers get a new lease on life, with a gym, a computer room—and on-site mental-health and medical services.
Newyorker.com

JOSÉ A. ALVARADO JR.

José A. Alvarado Jr. is a visual storyteller devoted to documenting cultural and social issues, as well as human interest stories in the US and Puerto Rico.
Website via Visura

JOSÉ A. ALVARADO JR. is integrated to:
Visura site builder, a tool to grow your photography business
Visura's network for visual storytellers and journalists
A photography & film archive by Visura
Photography grants, open calls, and contests
A newsfeed for visual storytellers