A Tiny Home For Good Wants to End Homelessness in Syracuse A Tiny Home For Good Wants to End Homelessness in Syracuse

Syracuse, NY, (NCC News)-Homelessness is a large issue in Syracuse and the areas surrounding it. According to the Housing and Homeless Coalition of Central New York, homelessness has increased by 40% since 2021. 75% of these people were never homeless before.

The problem has many layers, but some of it has to do with the affordable housing that people living in shelters are put into. A lot of the time they have sanitary issues and landlords that try to overcharge people for rent that already can’t afford it in the first place.

A Tiny Home for Good in Syracuse is trying to change that. They are a non-profit company that gives people coming out of shelters a safe place to stay. They constantly check up on their tenants and do things such as drive them to doctor’s appointments and make sure their house has no issues.

“Our mission is to end homelessness,” said director of tenant services Josh Seierson. “By building affordable housing and making sure that it stays affordable for our tenants.”

A Tiny Home for Good is unique in that most of their properties are built for one-person. In many public affordable housing systems, strangers have to share rooms, which can be very uncomfortable for many. Seirson says that all many of the tenants really want is their own key and their own place where they can start to build a new life for themselves. They have recently started accommodating small families in bigger houses, though.

The non-profit is working on building up its staff, which would help them be able to build more houses. Currently, there is a long waiting list of people. They have 26 houses built and 11 in the making.

“I really just feel like we are gaining a lot of momentum,” said director of development Katie Weaver. “We’re starting to be a part of the larger housing conversation in the city and the county.”

The entire staff values getting to know each and every tenant on a deeper level than just their name. They believe that showing them that they care will help the tenants be able to move on and work to build a better life.

According to a study conducted by the Maxwell School at Syracuse University, each tenant in the Tiny Home for Good program saves Onondaga County $117,694 each year. This comes from them having a decreased use of social security and emergency services.

Although the homelessness problem is not fixed yet, a Tiny Home for Good believes it is on its way to making a real change.

OLIVIA MANISCALCO: INSIDE AN UNSUSPECTING BUILDING IN SYRACUSE LIES THE HEADQUARTERS OF SOMETHING GREAT…
A TINY HOME FOR GOOD IS A NON-PROFIT THAT AIMS TO END HOMELESSNESS IN SYRACUSE… THEY PROVIDE AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR PEOPLE COMING OUT OF THE SHELTER SYSTEM… MOST OF THEIR HOUSES ARE BUILT FOR ONE PERSON…

OLIVIA: A TINY HOME FOR GOOD HAS THIRTY HOUSES WITH ABOUT ELEVEN IN THE PROCESS OF BEING BUILT… BEHIND ME IS ONE OF THE TINY NEIGHBORHOODS…

OLIVIA: THE HOUSES CAN BE EASY MISS…SPREAD ACROSS SYRACUSE IN CLUSTERS, THEY BUILD LITTLE COMMUNITIES OF PEOPLE ALL WITH THE SAME GOAL- TO MAKE IT OUT OF THEIR SITUATIONS… A TINY HOME FOR GOOD TRULY CARES ABOUT ITS TENANTS, AND DOESN’T RAISE RENT LIKE NORMAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING LANDLORDS… IT MAKES THEIR RETENTION RATE HIGH…AND GETS THEIR TENANTS PREPARED TO BUY OR RENT A PROPERTY ELSEWHERE… JOSH SEIERSON, DIRECTOR OF TENANT SERVICES AT A TINY HOME FOR GOOD, TELLS US WHY THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR ANDREW LUNETTA KNEW HE HAD TO DO SOMETHING WHEN STARTING THE NON-PROFIT…

JOSH SEIERSON: “HE WAS WATCHING THE MEN GOING OUT TO WHAT THEY THOUGHT WAS GOING TO BE PERMANENT HOUSING AND SEEING THEM RETURN MONTHS OR WEEKS LATER TO THE SHELTER BECAUSE THE PLACE THEY MOVED TO WAS JUST UNTENABLE… LIKE IT HAD BUGS ALL OVER THE PLACE, PIPES WERE LEAKING, THE LANDLORD WAS UNRESPONSIVE… OR THEY WERE HAVING TO SHARE ROOMS WITH OTHER PEOPLE SO AS HE ASKED AROUND THE DIFFERENT PEOPLE IN THE SHELTER WHAT THEY SAID WAS PRETTY SIMPLE…THEY JUST WANTED A HOME THAT ONLY THEY HAD THE KEY TO AND THAT THEY COULD LIVE IN PEACE AND KNOW THAT THEIR STUFF IS GONNA BE THERE.”

OLIVIA: AND THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT THESE MINIATURE HOMES PROVIDE… A SENSE OF SECURITY AND PEOPLE BEHIND THEM THAT TRULY CARE…

KATIE WEAVER: ONCE THEY MOVE IN THAT’S REALLY JUST THE BEGINNING YES WE PROVIDE HOUSING BUT REALLY THE DIFFERENTIATOR IN WHAT WE OFFER IS THAT AFTER CARE SUPPORT WE REALLY REALLY EXIST TO KEEP PEOPLE HOUSED WE WANT THEM TO STAY WITH US WE KNOW EACH OF OUR TENANTS BY NAME WE KNOW THEIR LIKES AND DISLIKES WE KNOW WHAT THEY’RE STRUGGLING WITH WE KNOW WHAT OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS THEY’RE CONNECTED TO… IT JUST RESPECTS THE HUMANITY OF THE INDIVIDUAL.

OLIVIA: ACCORDING TO A STUDY DONE BY SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, THE NON-PROFIT ENDS UP SAVING ONONDAGA COUNTY TAXPAYERS $117,694 PER TENANT EACH YEAR BECAUSE OF THE TENANT’S DECREASED USE OF SOCIAL AND EMERGENCY SERVICES… OLIVIA MANISCALCO, N-C-C NEWS…

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