New Help for the Homeless - S. Florida Business & Wealth

New Help for the Homeless

By Kevin Gale

Business leaders in Broward County are pitching in to try to address a decades-old issue—homelessness.

There are an estimated 2,300 homeless people in the county. It’s a high-profile matter, considering the homeless tent city located outside the Broward County Main Library in downtown Fort Lauderdale. Tent cities have been an on-and-off local feature going back to the 1990s, showing how intractable the situation has been.

Why do camps exist? In 1992, a federal judge in Miami told cities they needed to provide safe zones for the homeless. A camp sprung up in Fort Lauderdale’s Holiday Park and later moved to a lot near the main terminal for Broward County buses.

Miami has had several camps for the homeless, including under the Julia Tuttle Causeway, where registered sex offenders lived. While drivers going to Miami Beach might have had no idea that the homeless were living under Interstate 195, Fort Lauderdale’s homeless camp is in the middle of downtown.

In 2014, Fort Lauderdale tried to address the issue of the homeless camp at Stranahan Park, on the southeast corner of Broward Boulevard and Andrews Avenue, by passing restrictions on where charitable groups could feed people. While some homeless advocates applauded the move to regulate outdoor homeless feeding programs, others criticized the city, calling it “Fort Haterdale.”

In 2017, end loaders swept through the Stranahan Park camp after the city tipped off the state about sanitation issues. After a short motel stay, many of the homeless ended up on a plaza at the Broward County Main Library, next to the park, which was landscaped to thwart the return of the tent city.

A week of frequent rain in May this year resulted in a story on the front page of the Sun Sentinel about those whose tents were inundated.

While homeless people have a high profile near the library, there are many throughout the county. Sometimes, they set up camps under bridges or in the brush or wooded areas near interstate exits, where they can ask motorists for money.

Broward also isn’t the only county in South Florida struggling with homeless people, an issue covered in a 2015 SFBW article. While the opening of the Brightline station in Miami on May 19 this year heralded a new era in downtown Miami, it also brought imagery of the past: homeless people sleeping on sidewalks a few blocks away, on Flagler Street.

Now, the Fort Lauderdale business community has teamed up with United Way and the county to launch a holistic program, called United We End Homelessness.

Two prominent business leaders, AutoNation CEO and Chairman Mike Jackson and Castle Group CEO James Donnelly, will serve as co-chairmen for the initiative, which will seek $23 million to help address local homelessness. The Broward Business Council on Homelessness has also been formed.

“Looking at the homeless situation, it makes my heart ache,” Jackson said at the mid-year meeting of the Greater Fort Lauderdale Alliance. “We have to take extraordinary steps to put an end to this. We don’t have all the answers on what to do, but together we are working on it.”

Said Donnelly: “Homelessness first and foremost is a human tragedy. It’s also an economic and safety problem.”

The general approach will be to find homes for homeless people and then surround them with support programs. It’s modeled on a successful program in Orlando.

An economic issue, too

Two other key leaders in what will be a broad effort with religious leaders, government agencies and charitable groups are Greater Fort Lauderdale Alliance President and CEO Bob Swindell and United Way of Broward County President and CEO Kathleen Cannon.

Swindell says he heard from business leaders whose employees felt uncomfortable walking to lunch and being approached by homeless people. Businesses contemplating expansion or relocation to the area ask pointed questions about the community’s safety net and why business leaders have allowed the condition to fester.

The encampment is next to the Alliance’s headquarters, so the issue is highly visible to visitors, Swindell says.

Donnelly was sensitive to the matter in his role as chairman of the Broward Workshop, an organization of business leaders.

The Workshop’s Urban Core committee looked at the issue and discussed it with Jackson at a time when AutoNation was considering whether to renew the lease at its downtown Fort Lauderdale headquarters, which is about two blocks from the encampment. There had been rumors floating around the city that AutoNation might leave downtown.

Swindell and Donnelly said business leaders can help bring resources and an analytical data-based approach to addressing the issue.

They found an adviser when they learned about the efforts of Andrae Bailey in Orlando, who was previously CEO of the Central Florida Commission on Homelessness. He was named the 2015 Central Floridian of the Year by the Orlando Sentinel.

Orlando had been ranked the No. 1 mid-sized U.S. city when it came to the chronically homeless. Three years after Bailey started, a headcount found the number of homeless people had dropped 60 percent.

One study indicated housing the homeless was a way to save money on public services.

Homeless people on the street were costing $31,000 per person in public services whether because of hospitalization or incarceration, the Orlando Sentinel quoted Bailey as saying. The cost, once they found homes, dropped to $10,000.

Cannon said research indicates that 82 percent of homeless people who are placed in homes and given support are able to avoid becoming homeless in the future. That’s why there is an emphasis on finding homes first and then adding the wraparound support services. Cannon is thankful that County Administrator Bertha Henry is bringing together a wide collaborative of stakeholders as well.

The assistance homeless people need varies greatly because individual circumstances are so different, Cannon says. Some homeless people are actually employed, but don’t have enough money to pay the first and last month’s rent and the security deposit to get a home; they might need only some assistance and a subsidy. Others are too ill to work and will need more help.

Homeless for One Year
Carla, 66
Carla, who used to be a hospice nurse, had both her legs amputated below the knee four years ago. After spending years in a rehabilitation center, she was able to get around on her own. However, she was unable to work and her disability check is not enough to sustain housing.

Homeless for Five Years
Jennifer, 44
Several years ago, Jennifer suffered a traumatic brain injury. This left her with all her memories before the accident, but she is now unable to retain new ones. The former office manager for a large company was unable to perform simple tasks. Since becoming homeless, she says, she has been sexually assaulted at gunpoint.

The new unitedweendhomelessness.org website includes profiles of five homeless people. (Three edited profiles are included with this article.) The profiles show how medical issues are a frequent underlying cause of why people end up living on the streets.

Solutions might include housing vouchers or subsidizing rents while the recipients go through the sometimes-lengthy process to get Social Security disability payments.

It might be necessary to raise money to put in a risk pool for landlords, Cannon says. “So, if they are willing to take in the homeless and something happens to the apartment, a manager will come and make them whole.” ♦

You May Also Like
Sales Begin at 619 Brickell by Nobu, Foster + Partners

13th Floor Investments and Key International today announce the official launch of sales for 619 Brickell by Nobu · Foster + Partners, marking Nobu’s first-ever residential project in Miami. The

Read More
Luxury infinity pool and hot tub on a modern terrace overlooking the ocean, surrounded by lush plants and contemporary architecture, with a glass railing and a clear sky at sunset. South Florida Business & Wealth
Duty, Leadership, and the Long View 

 A veteran physician reflects on leadership, responsibility, and patient care beyond the clinic.  Atif M. Hussein, M.D., Medical Director and Program Director of the Hematology/Oncology Fellowship Program at Memorial Cancer

Read More
A smiling man in a white doctor’s coat and navy blue tie stands against a light background. The coat has embroidered text and a heart logo on the chest. South Florida Business & Wealth
All Flights Cancelled 

Spirit Airlines ceased all operations on May 2nd. What comes next?  For 34 years, Spirit was one of air travel’s most talked-about airlines. Known for budget flights with few included

Read More
Close-up view of a modern jet engine turbine attached to a yellow airplane, parked on an airport tarmac under a blue sky. South Florida Business & Wealth
Developers Break Ground on New Condominium Near Aventura Mall

 Growin Group and Property Pro Partners broke ground on EDEN, a new luxury residential development, located at 2557 NE 180th Street — near Aventura Mall. Boutique Residences The development will feature 32 luxury residences

Read More
A modern multi-story building with large glass balconies, palm trees on both sides, cars parked in front, and purple flowers in the foreground under a clear blue sky. South Florida Business & Wealth
Other Posts
Florida’s Insurance Reset, Through a National Lens 

Rocky Steele is Senior Vice President of Business Development at Trucordia, where he leads strategic growth initiatives and partnership development across key markets, including Florida. With deep experience in brokerage expansion and

Read More
A man with short brown hair wearing a gray suit jacket and white dress shirt smiles at the camera against a dark background. South Florida Business & Wealth
The Executive’s Guide to Financial Clarity

Financial success rarely arrives with simplicity. For executives and business owners, growing wealth often introduces a new layer of complexity, where liquidity, tax exposure, and family dynamics demand the same

Read More
Bald man wearing a blue checked suit jacket and light blue shirt, smiling at the camera, with a bright, blurred white background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Powering the Creator Economy 

In South Florida’s increasingly influential creator economy, Olivia Ormos is less focused on content than on what powers it.  As founder of mavn, the Miami entrepreneur is building the infrastructure layer

Read More
A woman in a black outfit stands holding a microphone in front of a MAVN sign, with two black chairs and display boards reading “influencer marketing done right” and “where creators, brands, + culture collide.”. South Florida Business & Wealth
Building Through the Bottleneck 

 Demand remains strong across South Florida, but rising costs, stalled deals, and execution challenges are reshaping how projects move from concept to completion  South Florida’s construction market is not slowing down. It

Read More
A mature man with gray hair and glasses, wearing a gray suit and white shirt, stands indoors and buttons his jacket. There is a brick wall with framed art and a beige couch in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth