Low-income seniors urge mayor to protect them from eviction

Dozens of elderly city residents gathered on the steps of City Hall this morning, urging Mayor Michael Bloomberg to protect them from eviction. The Advantage Program, which paid rent for single and disabled

News 12 Staff

Jun 2, 2012, 12:47 AM

Updated 4,346 days ago

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Low-income seniors urge mayor to protect them from eviction
Dozens of elderly city residents gathered on the steps of City Hall this morning, urging Mayor Michael Bloomberg to protect them from eviction.
The Advantage Program, which paid rent for single and disabled seniors while they got back on their feet or transitioned to Section 8 assistance, was dropped by the city last year after Gov. Andrew Cuomo canceled state funding for the program. Bloomberg says the city cannot afford to fund the program on its own. Around 1,500 New Yorkers who took part in the program now face eviction.
Community groups are asking the city to create a new plan to provide homeless New Yorkers with a path to permanent homes and prevent seniors from ending up in homeless shelters.
BK residents worried over end to Advantage Program15,000 ex-homeless families could be losing rent help


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