Keys to Hope. Keys to Home.

Nov 1, 2025

Keys to Hope. Keys to Home.

Nov 1, 2025

Keys to Hope. Keys to Home. 
By Nathaniel M. Fields,
November 1, 2025

On any given night, more than 104,000 people sleep in New York City shelters, the most in our city’s history. Thousands more are doubled up with relatives, sleeping in cars, or surviving on the streets.

Homelessness is not a single-issue crisis. It is the result of many systems failing at once: poverty, trauma, domestic violence, discrimination, and a chronic shortage of affordable housing. Each number in that record-high count represents a life interrupted, a family displaced, a survivor starting over, and a child wondering what “home” means.

At Urban Resource Institute (URI), we see these stories every day. As the largest provider of domestic violence shelter services in the nation and a leading provider of housing and support for families facing homelessness, URI provides safe refuge and essential services to nearly 4,000 people every night. But our work does not end with shelter.

We believe that the solution to homelessness begins with housing that is safe, stable, and affordable housing paired with the right support. Our continuum of care bridges the gap between crisis and stability, helping families rebuild through counseling, legal advocacy, economic empowerment, and permanent housing.

This vision is coming to life across New York City. In Flushing, Queens, Magnolia Gardens will soon open with 90 trauma-informed, pet-inclusive, and family-centered homes. In Harlem, two new developments will add 168 apartment-style units, and in East New York, our partnership with the Christian Cultural Center will bring the Innovative Urban Village to life—creating nearly 2,000 affordable homes and community resources.

Each project carries a key, both literal and symbolic: a key to hope, a key to healing, a key to home.

But today, these keys are under threat. The federal government shutdown is disrupting SNAP benefits and other critical services that millions of Americans depend on, including the families we serve. Without access to food assistance and housing support, families already living on the edge face another wave of instability and fear. HUD funding delays and frozen social programs risk halting projects, closing shelters, and deepening the crisis for those already most vulnerable.

The stakes are clear: without housing, there can be no healing. Without nourishment, there can be no stability. Without continued support, hope slips further away.

This Homelessness Awareness Month, as we reflect on Keys to Hope. Keys to Home., I ask you to consider what home means to you and to those still searching for it.

URI remains steadfast in our mission to open doors and rebuild lives. We will continue to fight for housing, safety, and dignity for every survivor and family who needs it. But we cannot do it alone.

Help us continue this lifesaving work for families facing housing insecurity and violence. Together, we can ensure that every key we hand over unlocks a future filled with hope, healing, and home. Join us at www.urinyc.org