William Galarza awoke to chills that felt like 10 levels in Union Sq. Park Tuesday morning, his nook of the general public area nonetheless cordoned off by the foot of snow that descended Sunday — probably the most New York Metropolis has seen in 5 years.
“I didn’t know the snow was coming that day, so I obtained caught right here,” Galaraza, 40, stated.
A blanket of snow swallowed his environment, and a single pair of footprints — Galarza’s personal — marked the way in which to his camp. Not one of the metropolis’s 400-plus homeless outreach specialists, he stated, had come to go to up to now through the chilly spell.
“No one even shoveled something over right here,” he added, pointing to a small clear patch in entrance of his fort, assembled with cardboards and folded tables and coated overhead with tarps held down by cinder blocks.
“Take a look at all this snow, I used to be pushing all of this,” he stated. “However somebody took my shovel.”

Homeless outreach specialists have positioned 170 unhoused New Yorkers into shelters and transitional housing since Jan. 19 because the company started to organize for file snowfall, Mayor Zohran Mamdani stated in a briefing Monday.
The Division of Homeless Companies couldn’t instantly present an replace to that determine Thursday, however spokesperson Neha Sharma stated outreach staff have made 620 referrals to its amenities from Jan. 19 by way of Wednesday afternoon — a quantity that counts a person for every evening they’re positioned right into a shelter. Most of these referrals, Sharma added, concerned individuals who’d beforehand resisted gives to maneuver into shelters.
These numbers account for a fraction of the greater than 4,500 New Yorkers who reside on the road, in keeping with the metropolis’s newest point-in-time estimate, tallied final winter.
Many, like Galarza, have remained unsheltered all through the frigid stretch, sleeping between interruptions on road corners, above warmth vents, inside parks, subway stations, quick meals eating places and financial institution vestibules.
Some unsheltered New Yorkers who’ve remained exterior informed THE CITY this week that they accomplish that by selection, preferring the freedoms of the streets to the curfews and restrictions of the shelter system. Others say they’ve merely fallen by way of the gaps.
The results of being unsheltered within the chilly will be dire, nonetheless. Since Saturday, 10 New Yorkers have been discovered exterior within the excessive climate and pronounced useless. Six of them, Mayor Zohran Mamdani stated on Wednesday, have been folks identified to the shelter system.
‘I Received No Dwelling’
Throughout “Enhanced Code Blue” occasions — a metropolis designation for particular protocols that happen throughout snowfalls and lengthy stretches of below-freezing days — outreach staff pay particular focus to the roughly 350 unsheltered people on their precedence lists, with a aim of visiting them as soon as each two hours from 8 p.m. to eight a.m. These lists broadly cowl people who reside with medical, psychological well being or substance use circumstances, who’re older, or who look like chronically underdressed.
Some companies step in to assist cowl the remainder of the town’s unhoused inhabitants through the climate emergency. Homeless help requests to 311, the town’s service line, for one, are rerouted by way of 911 to cops and emergency medical technicians to hurry up response instances. Parks Division officers, too, canvass greater than 100 parks the place unhoused folks collect, starting patrols at round 6 a.m. by way of midnight, stated Parks Enforcement Patrol Inspector Cynthia Thompson.

Mamdani on Tuesday additionally introduced extra emergency outreach protocols on the heels of the ten deaths, together with requests to shelter suppliers and faith-based organizations to have workers “canvass close by blocks and interact anybody who wants help” each few hours. Metropolis Corridor spokesperson Sam Raskin informed THE CITY Thursday that a number of of DHS’s standard accomplice companies are additionally concerned in finishing up the brand new measure, together with the Parks Division, the Division of Well being and Psychological Hygiene, the Emergency Administration Division and the town’s public hospital system.
Since then, no deaths of individuals discovered exterior within the excessive chilly have been reported, a police spokesperson stated Thursday night, whilst temperatures have remained frigid.
Whereas Galarza stated Tuesday that he had not been contacted by any of the town’s contracted outreach specialists through the chilly spell, he famous that Parks Division officers had twice related him with a room throughout the metropolis’s shelter system over the summer time.
“However they took me out of the place,” he stated, referring to shelter workers.
Galarza, who makes some earnings guarding chess gamers’ tables and items in Union Sq., stated he suspected it was as a result of he had violated curfews whereas working.
“I don’t know what’s the issue,” he stated. “Why I’m exterior on the streets, why the police be harassing me in every single place I am going.”
He stated he hasn’t thought a lot about returning to the shelter system since, principally due to his new companion: Casi, a tabby cat who had discovered her strategy to Galarza from the Union Sq. Vacation Market. (Pets are typically not allowed in shelters, with some exceptions.)
Galarza stated he wished outreach specialists would assist discover an lodging for him and Casi.
“I simply need to have a house. That’s why I come right here to work,” stated Galarza, stationed not distant from the park’s chess gamers. “However I obtained no house.”
‘Nothing You Might Actually Do’
A number of toes beneath the park, a person who requested to be recognized as John Lancaster sat alongside a staircase ledge contained in the Union Sq. subway station. Lancaster, 32, stated he had simply returned to the town from working a 13-hour shift at a warehouse in New Jersey.
He grew to become homeless shortly after his mom died two years in the past, he stated, and has been working a seasonal job on the warehouse since October. He had been staying with pals on the time, although that modified two months later.

“Folks — after they know you want them, they develop into predators, so I needed to depart,” stated Lancaster.
One among DHS’s drop-in facilities had related him to a Brooklyn resort shelter then, he stated, the place he was granted an exception to the curfew due to his evening shifts on the warehouse. However by the point he returned from work within the daytime, shelter workers had already given his mattress away to another person.
He tried strolling into shelters on a freezing day two weeks in the past too, with hopes of constructing use of the open-door coverage throughout Code Blue occasions, which circumvent regular consumption procedures whereas they’re in impact from 4 p.m. to eight a.m. the following morning.
“However they inform me it’s solely at evening,” he stated. “And I work at evening.”
Sharma, nonetheless, stated the open-door coverage extends to the daytime throughout “Enhanced Code Blue” occasions, when freezing circumstances stretch for days at a time, as has been the case since Jan. 23.
Different instances, Lancaster stated, he’s despatched on a runaround from one shelter to a different.
“They are saying the identical factor. They’ll say, ‘We don’t have room,” after which they’ll say, ‘Go discuss to that shelter too.’ And then you definately discuss to that shelter and so they let you know to speak to that different shelter,” Lancaster recalled. “There’s nothing you would actually do.”
Within the meantime, he’s been sleeping on bus rides offered by his firm to and from his job — two hours on the way in which there, and two hours on the way in which again. The remainder of the time, he stated, he tends to remain underground, bouncing from one subway station to a different to maintain heat.
“Proper now, it’s survive or die,” Lancaster stated. “And I’m simply not the sort to sit down and die.”
‘Puzzles and Survival’
Jojo was rolling up a cigarette in a nook of the principle corridor of Grand Central station as midday approached on Tuesday. The 54-year-old, who requested solely to be recognized by his nickname, stated he’d spent the evening earlier sleeping in a vestibule.
He doesn’t carry round blankets, and stated he tends to sleep in simply his garments — a black puffer and a number of other sweaters beneath — at evening.

“I mainly wander round ‘til I’m drained, and I go to sleep,” he stated. “After which I do that,” he continued, gesturing to how he’d tuck his fingers into his puffer sleeves at evening.
Jojo stated he prefers to sleep on the streets due to the surveillance at shelters.
“I used to be in jail for 10 years, and the shelter system will get very difficult with the police — and it ought to, as a result of it’s obtained so many individuals and so they need to get into one another’s issues,” he stated. “However I can’t be round any police.”
A few of his private belongings, he added, are additionally prohibited in shelters.
He pulled out a small spherical case from his puffer pocket, unfolding a nail clipper that he retains in it together with pendants collected from the bottom. One resembles a coronary heart, one other a ribbon, a 3rd a cranium with wings, and the final the Ankh — the traditional Egyptian image of life, generally used as a protecting amulet in on a regular basis life.
Jojo pointed to the nail file connected to the clipper. “That is thought-about a knife, and so they break it off,” he stated. “However I take advantage of it to wash my nails.”
His clipper is an particularly important a part of his private hygiene routine, he continued, recalling a time when he’d averted a job interview due to his nails.
“I cleaned as much as go to a enterprise interview that was put collectively, however my nails weren’t ok for me to go see these folks,” he stated. “And I didn’t go anyplace as a result of my nails have been a multitude.”
Today, Jojo principally spends his days in Midtown Manhattan — charging his telephone on a LinkNYC tower whereas enjoying his favourite online game on his telephone: “Puzzles and Survival.”
He likes to cease at a church close to Grand Central to sip on a scorching cup of espresso, too, he stated.
“It’s often open, heat, however [Monday] it was closed. And the opposite locations have been closed, so I figured they have been snowed in,” he added.
Jojo stated he’d spent the remainder of the Sunday at Grand Central and the Bryant Park subway station. However for the previous six months, he stated, he’s been occupied with leaving New York to get out of the chilly for good.
“I need to get to Nevada, get some ID, apply for companies, and be within the shelter once more,” Jojo stated. “In Nevada, I can start all once more.”
‘The Satan You Know’
Outdoors the Columbus Circle subway station, Alex, 42, organized his purchasing cart as he ready to duck underground.
The previous theater trainer stated he grew to become unhoused about three years in the past, after his job was eradicated amid the post-pandemic theater droop.
“COVID occurred, and the lack of theater got here, and it appeared prefer it hasn’t actually picked up the identical manner,” Alex, who requested to be recognized solely by his first identify. “I suppose I’ve simply been discouraged.”
He makes cash today by accumulating recyclables and promoting deserted furnishings and electronics on-line. And infrequently, he stated, his pals would invite him to spend the evening of their flats — as they’ve completed twice throughout this chilly snap, together with throughout Sunday’s snowstorm. Alex, in trade, would do chores round the home to assist out.

“Once I don’t need to impose on them, I am going to the subway stations,” he added. “As a result of after I’m on the practice in a single day I really feel like I’m imposing on the opposite passengers and whatnot.”
Lots of his unsheltered friends, he added, would collect within the cavernous 181th and 168th Avenue 1 practice stations as a result of they’re deep underground and supply higher insulation from the chilly.
“Sadly the police have been bothering us which is admittedly odd as a result of it’s Code Blue,” Alex stated, noting how officers have been evicting them from these stations “arduous core.” Nonetheless, he continued, he turns to these stations for heat: “I’ll spend the day there, selecting to be heat over being frozen.”
Outreach specialists, he famous, attain out to him “on a regular basis,” with gives to get him positioned into considered one of DHS’s amenities. He’s as soon as taken up their provide to shelter in a single-room occupancy constructing, however rapidly determined it was not for him.
“Upon arrival, I used to be informed, ‘Oh, your room doesn’t have a lock, however don’t fear, it’s cool,’ and it’s similar to an intuition. One thing simply doesn’t appear proper. It’s only a large pink flag straight away,” stated Alex, who finds the curfews and visitation guidelines at shelters restrictive. “There simply isn’t place to go to, the place you even have your individual area. So sleeping on the road is just like the satan you already know.”
The mid-afternoon solar was now tucked behind the clouds. The numbing wind whipped by way of Columbus Circle as Alex contemplated his plans for the night.
“Truthfully, proper now, I’m nearly to go to the lavatory, simply to clean up. Keep there for an hour or so, go to the following spot. It truly is like second to second,” he stated, his voice trembling from chilly as he spoke. “While you’re homeless you simply sort of need to get by way of the day. You attempt to make sufficient cash so you possibly can have some meals.”
He pushed his purchasing cart in the direction of the subway station elevator.
“Being homeless, I’m not sitting round at house watching the Climate Channel,” Alex continued earlier than getting into the elevator. “The chilly sneaks up on you. First it’s uncomfortable, then painful, earlier than you’re like ‘That is harmful.’ Frostbite isn’t any joke.”
Then in swift seconds the door closed, and the elevator carried Alex underground.

