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Housing issues affect everyone in Connecticut, from those who are searching for a safe place to live, to those who may find it increasingly difficult to afford a place they already call home.WNPR is covering Connecticut's housing and homelessness issues in a series that examines how residents are handling the challenges they face. We look at the trends that matter most right now, and tell stories that help bring the issues to light.

Hartford Cuts Funding to Homeless Shelter

Salvation Army
The Marshall House Family Shelter in Hartford lost some city funding.

The city of Hartford recently cut $100,000 from a homeless shelter as part of its effort to keep taxes down and avoid layoffs. Hartford Mayor Pedro Segarra said he's still hoping find money to undo the cut. 

These aren't easy financial times in cities like Hartford, where leaders say they've cut the budget until they can't cut it any more. That's how they end up with a choice like this: cut $100,000 from either a homeless shelter for families or from a program that prevents infant death.

Credit Chion Wolf / WNPR
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WNPR
Raul Pino, Hartford's health director.
Pino said the cuts were the result of budget negotiations between Segarra and the city council.

Raul Pino is the city's health director. It was his job to choose. "Up to the end," he said, "we tried to save this amount, because we knew how important this program is. It just came to a point where there was nowhere else to cut."

Pino said the cuts were the result of budget negotiations between Segarra and the city council, and it was his job to figure out what programs would lose money. He said the cut to the Salvation Army's Marshall House is especially painful because it means the shelter might also lose outside matching funds.

A Salvation Army official said that means that 30 adults with children could be without a place to stay come October. According to the Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness, the state had 458 homeless families on a night last January. Of those families, 72 were in Hartford. 

Apparently, not everyone on the city council was aware of just what was on the table, even though it approved the city's budget, and the cut.

City Council Minority Leader Larry Deutsch said he didn't vote for either. "It's a little like the story in 'Sophie's Choice,'" he said, "where you're told to sacrifice one or sacrifice the other, when really, in truth, there are other choices. This is all at the hands of the mayor."

Deutsch said Segarra has spent more money in less noble ways, like studying whether to build a new minor league baseball stadium. City officials said they are looking for ways to restore funding to Marshall House.

Jeff Cohen started in newspapers in 2001 and joined Connecticut Public in 2010, where he worked as a reporter and fill-in host. In 2017, he was named news director. Then, in 2022, he became a senior enterprise reporter.

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