Tens of thousands of New Yorkers use municipal shelters each night.
Rent subsidies are in jeopardy. And homelessness in New York City
is increasingly a family affair.
In all of Palladia’s programs, men and women with histories
of homelessness receive treatment, services, and housing assistance.
In programs targeted specifically towards homelessness and housing,
Palladia employs a multi-pronged approach, from a program designed
to keep those at risk of losing their housing off the streets, to
a homeless shelter for women who suffer from mental illness and
substance abuse, to OASAS-licensed transitional housing, to our
extensive permanent supportive housing division. With supportive
services available on site to help them maintain their independence,
hundreds of individuals and families have found a home at Palladia.
Palladia is also active in a number of coalitions and advocacy groups
working to improve prospects for the city’s homeless population,
including the Housing First campaign, the Supportive Housing Network
of New York, and the Committee on the Continuum of Care, the governing
body responsible for planning and advocacy around Federal homelessness
funding coming into the city.
Palladia has been in the housing business since the early 1990’s,
and we are now among the largest nonprofit providers of supportive
housing for families in New York City. In over 300 units of housing
throughout Manhattan and the Bronx, Palladia serves a number of
populations in our supportive housing programs, including those
living with HIV/AIDS, disabled adults, and homeless individuals
and families.
• Cedar
Tremont
• Dreitzer
House
• Hill
House
• Jerome
Court
• Stratford
House
• Chelsea
Court
• Scattered
Site Programs
• Flora
Vista
Esperanza
offers transitional housing in a service-rich environment under
a license from the New York State Office on Alcoholism and Substance
Abuse Services (OASAS).
HomeBase,
Palladia’s homelessness prevention program in collaboration
with the New York City Department of Homeless Services, helps residents
in the community of East Harlem whose housing is in jeopardy.
The Willow
Ave. Homeless Shelter helps 160 homeless women pursue independent,
healthy living with sobriety programs, internships, and supported
work.
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