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Advocates had feared a COVID surge among Boise’s homeless. It’s already started

Jodi Peterson-Stigers rarely sleeps nowadays.

The executive director of Interfaith Sanctuary, one of Boise’s largest homeless organizations, spends much of her time trying to keep the hundreds of people her organization serves safe and sheltered during a chaotic time.

And that was before 10 unhoused people, all of whom had tested positive for COVID-19, sought a place to quarantine in one night.

Interfaith Sanctuary Shelter Director Jordan Pereira collects a COVID test from a resident on Wednesday. The homeless crisis center has moved to daily mass testing after a surge of positive COVID cases among residents.
Interfaith Sanctuary Shelter Director Jordan Pereira collects a COVID test from a resident on Wednesday. The homeless crisis center has moved to daily mass testing after a surge of positive COVID cases among residents.

“I’ve reached a point where this is a little too scary for me,” Peterson-Stigers said. “I don’t think any of us are trained for this part of the job, this medical piece that’s so significant now.”

COVID-19 patients have been flooding Treasure Valley hospitals, with the state announcing Thursday that hospitals statewide would begin to ration care as available capacity reaches its limits.

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Now, that’s starting to include unhoused people in Boise, more of whom are getting sick as the long-expected surge takes hold, potentially adding to the strain already facing local health care providers.

“Anytime we have folks that might be in a communal setting or out in the community, where they may not have immediate access to resources, is definitely a concern,” said Rebecca Lemmons, director of community health and well-being at Saint Alphonsus Health System.

‘A lot of pressure’

Those at Interfaith began to get concerned as the number of local cases climbed in recent weeks. They had rented hotel rooms early in the pandemic to quarantine those with COVID but stopped when cases declined in the spring.

Now, they’ve rented 42 rooms in a Boise hotel in preparation for the latest surge. Interfaith asked that the hotel not be named to prevent a run on available rooms.

As of Tuesday, seven people were quarantined in the hotel rooms. Then 10 more people testing positive for COVID arrived, some at the shelter, seeking a place to quarantine. Peterson-Stigers said some arrived with a positive test in hand.

The shelter immediately adopted new protocols after the surge. Nobody displaying symptoms will be allowed inside. A symptomatic person will instead have to wait inside a quarantine room at the hotel until and the person obtains a negative test result.

The virus is clearly spreading throughout the community, Peterson-Stigers said, but the goal will be to protect the 140 people who stay in the shelter every night. It’s not the first outbreak in the community, but the low number of available hospital beds has made the situation more dire.