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March 20, 2024


Dear Kelly,


On Monday, the Senate Committee on Ways and Means released its version of the pending FY24 supplemental budget, Amendment S.2708. This supplemental budget primarily focuses on funding for the Emergency Assistance (EA) family shelter program and related services.


Yesterday was the deadline for Senators to file amendments to the Senate Ways and Means version of the budget. We worked with several Senate offices on drafting amendments to improve the bill and better serve children and families experiencing homelessness.


The full Senate is scheduled to debate the bill tomorrow in a formal session that will begin at 11 a.m. You can join us at the State House or tune in for the livestream on the Legislature's website: https://malegislature.gov/Events/Sessions/Detail/4884


Key Amendments


Please reach out to your State Senator today (or tomorrow morning) to ask them to cosponsor and actively support these key amendments:


  • Amendment 55 from Senator R. Kennedy on removing the proposed time limits on Emergency Assistance (EA) shelter access (9 months plus one or more 90-day extensions) and instead establishing an annual review of continued eligibility for ongoing shelter benefits and establishing criteria for ongoing eligibility
  • Amendment 31 from Senator Miranda on codifying and improving the HomeBASE rehousing program to allow more families to swiftly exit shelter into apartments of their own
  • Amendment 33 from Senator Miranda on extending the initial Emergency Assistance time limit from 9 months to 12 months and extending the periods between reevaluations from 90 days to 180 days to better match the needs of families and decrease the administrative burden on the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities (EOHLC)
  • Amendment 46 from Senator Eldridge on ensuring that families approved for shelter but awaiting placement are not barred from shelter when an opening becomes available because they increased their income while awaiting placement. The amendment would clarify that the income rules for families already placed in EA shelter also apply to families still on the waiting list.
  • Amendment 62 from Senator Eldridge on strengthening the proposed EA advisory commission by including families with lived experience of homelessness and more providers and advocates to be named directly and to be named by the Governor, Senate President, and Speaker of the House


Reach Out to Your State Senator


State Senators can be reached via the State House switchboard: 617-722-2000. The full contact information for each Senator is included on the Legislature’s website. Unsure who your Senator is? Find them by entering your address/address where you are staying here.


After you make your call or send an email to your Senator, let us know.


Your Advocacy Is Vital


The House version of the pending supplemental budget, House Bill 4466, would limit shelter stays for families in the Emergency Assistance shelter program to 9–12 months. While the Senate Ways and Means version would establish an initial authorization of 9-months of shelter benefits, it includes language that would require the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities to provide one or more 90-day extensions for certain families, a step in the right direction. We hope that you will take action today and tomorrow to ask your Senator to further strengthen protections for children and families experiencing homelessness.


To be clear, we stand firmly against artificial time limits on life-saving and life-changing EA benefits. Imposing time limits would put participating families, young children, and pregnant people at serious risk of harm, and would take a disproportionate toll on larger families, people with disabilities, people of color, and other households facing tremendous barriers to securing permanent housing. We also are concerned about the increased burden this would place on hospitals and clinics, nonprofit agencies, emergency services, and cities and towns across the Commonwealth. We are confident that time limits do not reflect our shared values of being an open, supportive, and responsive state. 


Throughout the 40-year history of our Emergency Assistance shelter system, and in the nearly two years since our shelters opened their doors to historic numbers of families, we have seen state agencies, nonprofits, faith organizations, and volunteers from all walks of life come together to support families at their time of greatest need. We recognize the difficult fiscal situation the state is facing, but time limits on EA shelter stays are not only unlikely to save money, but may well increase costs in the longer term, while causing untold suffering. 


We hope the Legislature will reconsider this course of action, and we are ready to work with the Legislature, the Administration, our partners, and other stakeholders to create the targeted housing resources and investments we need to ensure all families and individuals in Massachusetts have access to safe, stable, and affordable housing.


With hope,

Kelly Turley, Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless, kelly@mahomeless.org

Julia Garvey, Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless, julia.garvey@mahomeless.org

Andrea Park, Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, apark@mlri.org