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Housing insecurity is a public health issue. What does that mean in the context of coronavirus? Join Side Effects Public Media for its next installment of "Because of COVID-19," a series looking at the secondary impacts of the pandemic. Side Effects Public Media reporter Darian Benson will moderate a panel discussion with:Dee Ross, The Ross FoundationBrandon Beeler, Indiana Legal ServicesAbbey Chambers, PhD candidate, Indiana University-Purdue University IndianapolisAmy Nelson, Fair Housing Center of Central IndianaWhen: Thursday, Sept. 24, 12-1 p.m. RSVP here.

Black Families More Likely To Lack Housing Amid Pandemic

Courtesy of James Roberson
Single dad James Roberson, pictured with children Javaris, 9, Janiyah, 13, Jameshia, 15 and Jay'Shawn, 11. The family hotel-hopped for months around Indianapolis, before finding an apartment.

Three times a week, an Uber ride on Indianapolis’ East Side helps to perserve the life of bright-eyed, 11-year-old Jay’Shawn Roberson.

Every other weekday, Jay’Shawn and his snaggletooth smile take a ride from his Brightwood apartment to Riley Hospital for Children for dialysis treatments. James Roberson uses lunch breaks to take his son to outpatient care, leaving Jay’Shawn there so he can return to the job that is a lifeline for his formerly homeless family. 

“I was pretty much stable,” says the single father of five. “I had a home [last year] and everything was going good and it all went downhill out of the blue. It takes a lot to be able to able to handle the situation. Times are hard.”

Last year, Roberson hotel-hopped with his family to keep them out of shelters, where he feared he could be split up from his two daughters. He struggled to stretch the $250 he received in unemployment to pay for the stays. 

Hoosier housing experts say the coronavirus has put added pressure on many families. There may be fewer  options to live with relatives, leaving more parents and children without a permanent residence.

“If a family is experiencing homelessness and does not have a safe place to shelter, they risk losing their kids,” says Chelsea Haring-Cozzi Executive Director of the Coalition for Homelessness Intervention & Prevention.

“That's huge. [They] risk that whole family being broken up.”

And that can hit the Black community especially hard.

Two-thirds of the people in family shelters in Indiana are Black, she says. A number of factors, including  unemployment and housing loss exacerbated by the pandemic, have increased the needs of families experiencing homelessness.

“It’s often Black heads of households that have multiple children that are most at risk of eviction, which can lead to homelessness,” Haring-Cozzi says of Marion County disparity trends.  “We must focus on the whole family and families of all types.”

In December, the coalition received a financial boost: a $1.25 million grant from the Day 1 Families Fund launched by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. 

Credit Provided by James Roberson
Eleven-year-old Jay'Shawn smiles in a hospital bed.

Still, organizers say shelters in central Indiana often turn away families because they are at capacity.

IUPUI housing policy expert Kelsie Stringham-Marquis says Marion County shelters don’t always have beds that match a particular demographic — like a father with children.

“[There’s] a chaotic outside factor, there's not always going to be a bed available that matches my family dynamic and my family structure,” she says. “That creates a lot of tension and complication for individual families who are navigating housing instability.”

The latest Marion CountyPoint in Time Count shows the number of people experiencing homelessness increased slightly to 1,588. And 54% of those in the count  identified as Black or African American.

Stringham-Marquis say that shows the disproportionate impact on Black Hoosiers. The next count is set to begin later this month.

In a year full of challenges, the coalition has responded to the pandemic by establishing non-congregate shelters throughout the city. It also has expanded outreach to unsheltered families at high risk for contracting the virus for rapid rehousing.

Credit Provided by James Roberson
Single father James Roberson poses with two of his sons, Javaris (left) and Jay'Shawn.

Jay’Shawn's kidney ailment brought Roberson and his children to Indianapolis last year. After living with a relative who died last January, they moved from Chicago to seek medical treatment.

Roberson, a certified plumber, works maintenance at the apartment complex where they have lived for a month — housing paid for the nonprofit Family Promise of Greater Indianapolis.

He’s thankful for that support. “Times is hard now, and a lot of people are just worried about self-love, so there are not too many people out there sincere about helping others."

Jay’Shawn also suffers from asthma and high blood pressure. Other members of the family have health issues as well, including strokes and autism.

Roberson is proud he’s kept his family together despite  these health challenges. But it's hard to keep up with expenses, including the $30 roundtrip ride for Jay'Shawn to get to dialysis.

February is a time for hope for the family. Roberson says aims to take over the lease payments and keep providing for his family with his new job.

“I am grateful to have [Family Promise] as a part of my life,” he says. “It’s starting to get a little better.”

This story was produced by Side Effects Public Media, a news collaborative covering public health.