Inside a New York City Shelter Where Surveillance, Fractured Oversight, and Fear Shape Daily Life
Lisa had been asleep when the sound jolted her awake — a hard knock, a pause, then the click of a key card at her door. Light spilled in from the hallway as someone opened it, checking that she was still there.
These “wellness checks,” as they were called, happened around the clock, Lisa said — sometimes every few hours, including overnight. After a while, she stopped sleeping deeply. Her body learned to stay alert.
She has lived at the Vanderbilt Stabilization Residence since February.
Before becoming unhoused, Lisa moved comfortably through professional spaces. She worked in human resources and recruiting, traveled widely, and speaks with the ease of someone accustomed to navigating large institutions. When she first arrived at the shelter, staff and residents alike often mistook her for a caseworker.
She corrected them, she said. Then people kept talking anyway.
What woke her at night, she later learned, was part of a systemwide practice — one she was far from alone in experiencing.
Constant Monitoring, Interrupted Sleep
Public health reporting has documented an increase in overdose-prevention measures across New York City’s shelter system in recent years, including the use of Narcan and more frequent monitoring of residents with medical or substance-use risks — practices the Department of Homeless Services has said are intended to prevent deaths and medical emergencies in congregate settings. For some residents, however, those measures can also mean constant surveillance and disrupted sleep.
At the Vanderbilt Stabilization Residence, those practices unfold inside a former YMCA facility on East 47th Street in Manhattan. The building is owned and operated by the YMCA of Greater New York. Day-to-day shelter services, including case management, security coordination, and resident oversight, are run by Bowery Residents’ Committee under contract with the New York City Department of Homeless Services.
Residents are housed in private rooms, a distinction that has earned the site a reputation as one of the better options in the city’s shelter system.
“Better,” Lisa said, “is relative.”
A ‘Better’ Shelter with Strings Attached
The relative calm of the building, she said, was no accident. It was the product of a layered system of oversight, contracts, and shared responsibility — a structure that can appear orderly while leaving residents uncertain about where to turn when something goes wrong.
In practice, residents experience the system as a single environment: one set of hallways, one front desk, one locked door at night. Behind the scenes, authority is fractured. Maintenance issues may fall to the building operator. Staffing decisions may belong to the shelter provider. Policy enforcement is governed by city regulations, while complaints often move slowly through internal reporting channels.
When something breaks — a refrigerator that does not cool, a radiator that does not heat, a mattress that has not been replaced — residents are instructed to submit work orders. Lisa said she has watched requests sit unresolved for weeks. Others, she said, stop submitting them altogether.
“It feels like general population in a prison,” she said — not because of the walls, but because of the uncertainty. Who is responsible? Who decides? Who listens?
Fractured Oversight and Nowhere to Turn
Beyond this site, national reporting has long shown that women in New York City shelters often experience heightened fear in mixed-gender settings, even in facilities considered orderly. Separately, investigations into the city’s shelter system have documented systemic oversight failures, including fragmented responsibility and weak accountability, according to a city watchdog report covered by Gothamist.
That uncertainty extends beyond maintenance. The population housed at the site is diverse: women fleeing domestic violence, older adults with medical needs, people newly released from incarceration, and residents with serious mental illness. Some have cycled through the shelter system for years; others arrived after a single crisis.
They share elevators, floors, and common spaces.
Early on, Lisa said, she struggled with the lack of separation — not out of judgment, but fear. She described feeling constantly on alert, aware that some residents had been recently released from prison, including individuals with histories of violence or sexual offenses.
“There are only two floors for women,” she said. “The rest are men.”
At night, she said, the building never fully settles. Doors open and close. Keys tap. Voices rise, then fall. The wellness checks continue.
For many residents, Lisa said, the safest option is silence.
Bowery Residents’ Committee did not respond to detailed questions about operations, oversight, and resident complaints at the Vanderbilt Stabilization Residence by publication time.