East Villagers revolt! Neighborhood furious over Mamdani ‘emergency order’ sticking it with planned men shelters

East Village residents are up in arms over Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s scheme to relocate one of the Big Apple’s most notorious homeless shelters to their neighborhood — potentially transforming it into a doormat for Gotham’s indigent, and a magnet for crime.
Former clientele at the soon-to-shutter Bellevue Shelter on East 30th Street in Midtown included a slew of ex-cons and sickos, such as deranged stabber Ramon Rivera, who went on a 2.5-hour stabbing spree in Manhattan on Nov. 18, 2024, that killed three people.
“None of you all can stop drinking and drugging … and all lingering around here creating crimes and all kinds of stuff,” roared Rev. Keith Gadson, one of the hundreds of locals who bashed city officials at a heated meeting Tuesday about the under-the-radar facility. “Put it in your neighborhood!”
Mamdani abruptly announced in March that Bellevue’s then-250 residents would be headed downtown, saying the nearly century-old site was in a “severe state of disrepair.”
Beginning May 1, the city’s main homeless intake center — where they are assessed and connected to mental health and social services — will be at 8 East 3rd St., a building where nonprofit Project Renewal currently provides a homeless shelter and other services.
The facility will have 117 beds, with residents staying roughly one to two days before being relocated to other sites, the Department of Homeless Services said.
Stays are supposed to be short-term, but the Bellevue site came under fire from critics because the city housed homeless New Yorkers there for months at a time.
Intake services for families without children will be relocated to the 117-bed sister facility at 333 Bowery, which is about a block away from the East 3rd Street site.
And the city has the power to flood both buildings with hundreds of more residents — for as long as it wants — according to a review of Mamdani’s March 26 “emergency executive order” approving the shelter switcheroo.
The order suspends a local city code that currently prohibits more than 200 shelter beds at shelter sites. The suspension also waives safety-code regulations prohibiting no more than 90 people on the first floor of both East Village sites.
“This will not be temporary shelters as they claim, it will be mega-shelters,” said Jason Murillo, a neighborhood activist and Republican running for state Senate.
Murillo accused Mamdani of pushing through the relocation plan under the guise of an “emergency” to avoid community backlash.
He and other neighbors are planning to file a lawsuit to block the opening, fearing the facility will be a magnet for criminals.
During the meeting, Murillo told DHS officials residents were upset over the rushed process — and have serious concerns that the shelters would be a bad mix for a neighborhood filled with apartment buildings, restaurants, schools, hotels and bars.
“We support services for vulnerable New Yorkers, but the issue here is transparency and planning,” he said. “Where is the environmental review? Where was the public safety plan to make sure we are all safe?”
DHS officials insisted the city notified the neighborhood as fast as it could — and that it would take steps to ensure both the interior and exterior of both buildings would be kept clean and secure.
Other residents in attendance questioned why the Bellevue site simply couldn’t be renovated or why Mamdani couldn’t find another location for it in Midtown.
“We have lots and lots of empty store space!” ripped one woman. “You can rent a store space in the 42nd street area? So why us?”
It’s unclear what will become of the prime Midtown real estate once the Bellevue intake center is vacated.
DHS police and security staff will regularly monitor the new shelters’ exteriors to limit crowding and loitering and will work with NYPD cops to address any community concerns, a Mamdani administration spokesman said, adding there is “no expectation” lines will form outside.
Both East Village intake centers will operate on a “temporary” basis until the city builds a permanent site, a process that could take several years to complete, he said.
Most residents staying at the Bellevue site will be relocated to more permanent accommodations in other parts of NYC — not the new East Village intake centers, the spokesman added.
However, neighborhood activist Veronica Gonzalez said on X that “local residents are fed up.”
“Our community, families, and district deserve answers from City Hall and the mayor,” added Gonzalez, a Republican running for state Assembly.
“We hope to receive an answer soon from Mayor Mamdani and a full pause to the relocation of the Bellevue Homeless Shelter [to] the East Village.”