Phoenix council approves more beds for Arizona shelter

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A large homeless encampment is shown in Phoenix, on Aug. 5, 2020. On Thursday, Dec. 15, 2022, a federal judge temporarily halted the city of Phoenix from conducting sweeps of a huge homeless encampment downtown. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

The City Council has approved another 275 beds for Arizona’s largest shelter for homeless people.

Councilmembers on Wednesday agreed to the zoning change that eventually will allow up to 700 beds for homeless people at the downtown site.

The vote also allows the charity St. Vincent de Paul to continue operating 200 beds nearby during extreme weather conditions when summer temperatures soar into triple digits.

The final tally was 8-1 with Councilman Carlos Garcia casting the opposing vote.

Some downtown residents and business owners have opposed adding beds to the Central Arizona Shelter Services facility. They suggest scattering small shelters around greater Phoenix rather than concentrating additional beds in the same place.

Maricopa County, which covers the metropolitan area, is home to nearly 7,500 homeless people, according to the last count in early 2020.

Agencies that help the homeless in Arizona’s largest county say the annual January count of people living on the streets was canceled over concerns about the possible spread of the coronavirus.

During the pandemic, shelters have been accepting somewhat fewer people each night to allow for spacing between beds.

With the additional beds approved Wednesday, there eventually will be 1,788 in Phoenix.

Republished with the permission of the Associated Press.