New York Mayor Eric Adams announced a plan to involuntarily hospitalize homeless people deemed psychiatrically ill on Tuesday.

The city councilor decided on this measure in order to fight against the growing insecurity in the city.

"If people with serious mental illness are homeless and pose a danger to themselves, we have a moral obligation to help them get the treatment and care they need," the mayor said. democrat.

A former police officer, Eric Adams has made the fight against violence the basis of his municipal policy.


Those suffering from severe mental illness have more than a right to exist or survive.

They have a right to healthcare, housing, and treatment.

A right to dignity and respect.

A right to safety and security.



Read more: https://t.co/9ZECnw2ZNw pic.twitter.com/MK3CHA2XmI

— Mayor Eric Adams (@NYCMayor) November 29, 2022

Access to this content has been blocked to respect your choice of consent

By clicking on "

I ACCEPT

", you accept the deposit of cookies by external services and will thus have access to the content of our partners

I ACCEPT

And to better remunerate 20 Minutes, do not hesitate to accept all cookies, even for one day only, via our "I accept for today" button in the banner below.

More information on the Cookie Management Policy page.



A "myth that must disappear" according to the mayor

A bill is due in 2023 in the New York State legislature and executive.

It provides for the intervention on the public highway and in the metro of the police, security, public health and social assistance services in order to arrest and forcibly hospitalize homeless people suspected of suffering from mental and psychiatric disorders.

“There continues to be a mistaken belief that we could only help someone against their will if they are violent, suicidal or present a risk of immediate danger”, argued Eric Adams.

“It's a myth that needs to go.

We will do everything to help those who suffer from mental illnesses that put them in danger and prevent them from meeting their basic needs.

»

Growing insecurity in the city

In power since January 2022, Eric Adams immediately pledged to drive the countless homeless people who survive there from the New York subway.

There would be 50,000 homeless in the city, according to estimates by associations and social services.



The number of crimes and misdemeanors increased in New York in 2021, after the Covid-19 pandemic.

The feeling of insecurity continued to grow in 2022 in certain neighborhoods and in the metro, especially after murders.

According to weekly police statistics, 391 people were killed in New York between January 1 and November 27, compared to 440 for the same period of 2021.

Paris

"Giving something new is rewarding", 3,300 down jackets created by Monoprix for the needs of the homeless distributed in Paris

Company

Why is the anti-squat bill arousing so many reactions?

  • World