New York City homeless man sleeps on sidewalk with toaster oven, crisis worst 'since Great Depression'
Shocking images of homelessness greet Manhattan tourists today despite billions in spending
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New York City sidewalks are showcasing a little shop of horrors.
The humanitarian crisis of homelessness festers in broad daylight today just steps from the tourist-packed heart of Manhattan.
One man slept on a sidewalk in the rain with trash, food and filth littered around him on West 43rd Street this past Sunday morning, exactly two blocks from where New York City drops its iconic New Year’s Eve ball in Times Square.
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A toaster oven sat next to the man, which he apparently used to heat his food on the sidewalk by plugging it into a light pole. New York City utility poles have an accessible box at the bottom, which contains ordinary household electrical sockets.
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The man slept in front of the Westside Theatre, the home since 2019 of the off-Broadway hit and tourist attraction "Little Shop of Horrors."
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"It just keeps getting worse," Sal "Sinatra" Salomon, a New York City singer, actor and advocate for the homeless, told Fox News Digital this week.
"This is the greatest city in the world and this is unacceptable," said Salomon.
The theater of the absurd proliferates even as the city's Dem leaders dump billions of taxpayer dollars into failed programs and shelters that are run by private contractors.
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Salomon says he spent years living on the streets and also time behind bars in state custody.
The city shelters, in his opinion, "are worse than prison" — that's one reason why so many people prefer a hard life on the streets, he suggested.
"NYC homeless shelters are worse than prison." — Sal Salomon
"Prison workers have supervisors and are trained to respect the privacy of the men in prison," he said. "Shelters are run by some loudmouth from the neighborhood who knows the mayor and hires their friends with city money."
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"Conditions at the shelters are deplorable," agreed State Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Democrat who represents Midtown Manhattan.
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"They're unsafe and inadequate," he added.
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"When you make that decision to lie down and sleep on the sidewalk, it means you've given up. It means you're not getting the help you need," said Salomon.
Containers of food littered the street in the gutter next to man with the toaster oven, along with a shopping cart full of empty cans and bottles.
Homelessness in the neighborhood "is an ongoing problem and we’re highly concerned about the welfare of these individuals," Westside Theatre general manager Terry Byrne told Fox News Digital in an interview.
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NYC spends about $43,750 per year per homeless person — 50% more than it spends on each schoolchild.
New York City’s homeless population has surged in recent years to 80,000 people, according to The Bowery Mission, a 150-year-old agency serving the hungry and homeless, citing federal data.
"Homelessness in New York City has reached the highest levels since the Great Depression of the 1930s," the Coalition for the Homeless reports.
The New York City Department of Social Services and Homeless Services website says that 55,338 people, including more than 18,000 children, slept in city shelters on Sept. 11, 2022, the same day the man with the toaster event slept outside Westside Theatre.
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State sen. Hoylman used the same Great Depression comparison in an interview with Fox News Digital.
"There are many people making money off this tragic situation but not delivering the services that the city needs," he said.
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"City leaders created this problem. It’s a manmade problem." — GOP activist Jackie Toboroff
The crisis comes despite billions spent on failed programs.
New York City’s Department of Social Services and Homeless Services boasts an annual budget of $2.1 billion, while former comptroller Scott Stringer reported last year that the Big Apple spent a total of $3.5 billion on homelessness in 2020.
That adds up to an annual spending of $43,750 per homeless person — about 50% more than the city spends per child on education.
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One Vanderbilt, New York City's newest luxury skyscraper that towers 1,401 feet over Midtown Manhattan — 151 feet taller than the Empire State Building — cost about $3.1 billion for private developers to build, according to industry sources.
That total is less than the city's annual spending on homelessness.
Yet heartbreaking images of the homeless living in deplorable conditions on the streets shock visitors who have flooded back to New York City this year — especially in high-visibility marquee locations in and around Times Square.
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In recent weeks, "The Crossroads of the World" has welcomed more than 350,000 pedestrians each day, according to the Times Square Alliance. That matches and even exceeds the pre-pandemic numbers of 2019.
A person slept outside an empty storefront at the corner of Eighth Avenue and West 45th Street on Monday, wearing socks and sweatpants.
The person's face was covered by a cardboard sign from New York City Local 1199 of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) touting "prime pay!" for workers.
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One man, also without shoes, sat bleary-eyed outside an entrance to the 42nd Street/Port Authority subway station at the corner of Eighth and 44th Street.
"Everybody needs to grow up and fix the problem."
His right hand rested on the filthy sidewalk, while his left arm was wrapped up inside his jersey.
Steps away, a pile of debris spilled out of a trash bin at the corner of West 43rd Street, one of the busiest pedestrian intersections in Manhattan.
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"City leaders created this problem. It’s a manmade problem," Republican activist, former city council candidate and lifelong Manhattan resident Jackie Toboroff told Fox News Digital.
She cited a long list of reasons for the city’s homeless explosion.
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"They emptied the jails, they shut down Broadway and business for two years, they ruined education for children, they made drug use aspirational, their mandates forced people to lose their jobs, they flooded the city with illegal immigrants — and now we have the cost of the Biden economy," said Toboroff.
Fox News Digital reached out to NYC's Department of Social Services and Homeless Services for comment.
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"The city needs some tough love right now, not whining and crying," said Salomon.
"Everybody needs to grow up and fix the problem."