A homeless man sits in Chelsea.
Photograph by Dean Moses
Greater than 154,000 NYC public college college students had been homeless final 12 months, based on a report printed on Monday by the Advocates for Youngsters of New York (AFC). That quantity is sort of one in each seven college students enrolled within the nation’s largest public college system.
The stunning statistic made the 2024-2025 college 12 months the tenth consecutive 12 months during which greater than 100,000 college students didn’t have a everlasting place to name dwelling. It was additionally the primary educational 12 months during which the full variety of children in momentary housing exceeded 150,000.
The report, primarily based on information from the NYS Schooling Division, comes at a time when NYC households are struggling to afford fundamental wants, together with shelter and meals. Households even struggled to buy college provides final month, marked by numerous backpack and provide giveaways all through town.
Based on the brand new report, practically 65,000 homeless youngsters hung out residing in metropolis shelters final 12 months. Greater than 82,000 had been “doubled up,” or quickly shared housing with others. The general charge elevated from the earlier college 12 months and was highest in Bronx faculties, adopted by these in Manhattan.
On the neighborhood college district stage, multiple in 5 college students was recognized as homeless at faculties in East Harlem (District 4), Highbridge and Grand Concourse (District 9), Brownsville (District 23), and Bushwick (District 32) in the course of the 2024–25 college 12 months.
Researchers who did the research mentioned that when college students are homeless or reside in shelters, they face “tremendous obstacles” to their educational success.
Research have proven that absenteeism will increase, grades go down and the chance of high-school commencement charges lower.
“Based on data for the 2023-2024 school year and educational outcome, one in eight students in shelter dropped out of high school,” Jennifer Pringle, who directs AFC’s work with college students in momentary housing, mentioned. “This is three times the drop-out rate of their permanently housed peers.”
She added that their four-year commencement charge was 62% in comparison with 85% for completely housed college students. Homeless youngsters face persistent challenges in attempting to beat academic boundaries.
“For example, 40% of families in shelter are placed in a different borough from where the children go to school,” Pringle defined. “Not a different neighborhood, not a different community school district — a different borough.”
Addressing the problem
“We know that homeless students face an uphill climb, from battling chronic absenteeism to struggling to meet the benchmarks their housed peers routinely meet,” she mentioned.
A brand new mayoral administration might carry extra alternatives to handle the problem, advocates mentioned. Maria Odom, govt director of AFC, even mentioned town is “currently failing students” who reside in shelters.
“Ensuring students who are homeless receive the support they need to be successful in school must be a top priority for the next mayor, who must lead a citywide, cross-agency effort to break down bureaucratic silos, reverse these alarming trends, and ensure students experiencing homelessness can get to school every day and receive the educational support they need to succeed,” she mentioned.
Quinn known as for robust motion from Metropolis Corridor.
“As our city prepares to welcome a new mayor, we have a ripe opportunity to bring new attention to this crisis and to finally end the family homelessness epidemic,” she mentioned. “I urge our leaders in City Hall to embrace bold, new solutions to get more families into permanent homes and to end this crisis once and for all.”