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Language Interpretation Needs Soar in City Homeless Shelters: Data

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Language Interpretation Needs Soar in City Homeless Shelters: Data

 During the past five years, requests for interpretation by phone that were answered by the city’s Language Line or with an on-site interpreter increased more than five-fold in the Department of Homeless Services shelter system, jumping from 18,660 in 2020 to 107,083 in 2024.

Adi Talwar

Signs in multiple languages the American Red Cross Headquarters in Manhattan, where migrants and asylum seekers in shelter can pick up mail.

The number of people sleeping in the city’s Department of Homeless Services (DHS) shelter system has shot up over the past two years, with a 30 percent increase over last year, and an 89 percent increase compared to the end of fiscal year 2022.

The new data, included in the latest Mayor’s Management Report released this week (MMR), shows there were 86,000 individuals in DHS shelters during the fiscal year that ended in June.

The uptick is mainly due to the arrival of more than 210,000 migrants and asylum seekers to the city in the last two years, tens of thousands of whom remain in DHS sites and emergency shelters run by other city agencies, though with time limits on their stays.

Asylum seekers represent 37 percent of the DHS shelter population alone, most of them families with children, while comprising most of the growth, 79 percent, since 2022, per report data.

As the DHS shelter system has mushroomed, more people in shelters are looking for language interpreters. During the past five years, completed requests for interpretation by phone with the city’s Language Line or with an on-site interpreter increased more than five-fold in the DHS shelter system, jumping from 18,660 in 2020 to 107,083 in 2024.

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