Crossroads CEO Says Permanent Housing is ‘The Only Real Solution’ to Homelessness in RI

On the Rhode Island Report podcast, the president and CEO of the organization, which provides support and services to those experiencing homelessness, talks about the crisis in Rhode Island

Share
Crossroads CEO Says Permanent Housing is ‘The Only Real Solution’ to Homelessness in RI
Copy

The number of people experiencing homelessness in Rhode Island is on the rise, with more than 2,400 people counted in the 2024 “point-in-time” count, and roughly 7,000 expected to experience homelessness over the course of the year.

On Rhode Island PBS Weekly and the Rhode Island Report podcast, Michelle Wilcox, the new president and CEO of Crossroads Rhode Island, said the organization is building hundreds of apartments, aiming to house as many people as possible. There are 176 apartments under construction now on Summer Street, and another 35 are slated to begin soon on Pine Street, in a new building that will serve medically-vulnerable adults experiencing homelessness.

The well-known “tower” at Crossroads’ Broad Street headquarters is also set to be renovated into 80 one-bedroom apartments, a big change from the 176 single rooms currently being used to house homeless individuals there. The existing residents will move to the new Summer Street apartments next year before construction begins.

“Permanent housing is the only solution, the only real solution to homelessness,” Wilcox said. Crossroads also operates multiple emergency shelters.

With winter approaching, Rhode Island’s planned 45-unit “pallet shelter” village is still not up and running, despite initial plans to open in March. Housing Secretary Deborah Goddard said the shelters will not open by the end of the year, but are expected to open this winter after hitting multiple roadblocks with the state’s building and fire codes. (The pallet shelters are not a Crossroads project.)

Watch the PBS interview with Wilcox in the video player above. Follow Rhode Island Report podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other podcasting platforms, or listen to this episode in the player above.

This story is part of a collaboration between the Boston Globe Rhode Island and Rhode Island PBS. To access the Globe online for free for 30 days, sign up here (no credit card required).

Tree canopy gaps mirror income divides in Newport, as conservationists race to restore native trees and lost federal funding threatens efforts to expand “tree equity” in the city’s North End
The closure of Spectrum-India after 59 years adds to the steady loss of small businesses in Providence neighborhood
The incident brought America’s commonplace gun violence just feet away from a room full of lawmakers, top officials, and journalists. It also may add to a string of troubling political violence in the U.S. that includes two assassination attempts on President Trump.
President Trump and the first lady are uninjured after a shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday in Washington, D.C.
Three polls offer a warning sign for Gov. McKee
Six confirmed cases in six weeks prompt public health advisory; residents urged to avoid contact with wildlife and vaccinate pets