As temperatures in Midwestern cities plunged to levels colder than parts of Antarctica and officials warned people not to step outside even for a few minutes, Tony Neeley stood on a downtown Chicago street corner Tuesday, wearing wet sneakers and clutching a hand warmer packet in each of his bare hands. He had already been there for hours.

“I’m cold and I’m afraid,” Mr. Neeley said, adding that he was trying to raise enough money from the bundled commuters rushing past to pay for a $45 motel room on a night that weather forecasters warned would send the Midwest into a deep freeze unlike anything even this region has seen in years.

What about the prospect of going to one of the scores of shelters officials in Chicago — and in cities like Minneapolis, Milwaukee and Detroit — had urged homeless people to seek warmth in during the stretch of dangerous and extreme cold?

“You don’t understand,” Mr. Neeley said. “A lot of us don’t go to the shelters because of bedbugs, we don’t go because people steal from you, we don’t go because you can’t even really sleep in the shelter. But my feet are cold, and these clothes are all I’ve got.”

As the polar vortex dumped a vicious mass of arctic weather on the middle of the nation, states like Michigan and Wisconsin declared emergencies, schools and university classes were canceled, museums were closed and many workers were told to stay home. But as health officials issued numerous warnings about the dangers of frostbite and hypothermia, homeless people faced potentially devastating circumstances.

The severity of the threat was expected to be at its worst on Wednesday, a day that forecasters said could deliver actual temperatures in the minus double digits and wind chill readings as low as minus 50 or 60. Wind aside, the high temperature in Chicago was expected to be minus 15, the low minus 26, according to predictions Tuesday evening.

Cold winter temperatures are nothing new for those without homes in the Midwest, and big cities have always had plans to assist the homeless. But several Midwestern cities, including Akron, Ohio, and Kalamazoo, Mich., have had painful reckonings with homeless encampments over the past year. And the searing, face-burning winds that arrived this week, and the numbing, record-breaking temperatures that were soon expected, brought a level of risk for the homeless that has rarely been seen.

A campsite on Lower Wacker Drive, where someone was sleeping beneath a pile of blankets.

As residents bustled around Chicago on Tuesday, many of them shopping for last-minute goods before settling in at home for the worst of the weather, several areas where homeless people congregate had emptied, too.

The Chicago Coalition for the Homeless estimates that about 80,000 people are homeless in the Chicago area. Estimates vary widely about the homeless population throughout the Midwest.

In Detroit, officials said they were racing to reach out to homeless people and offer places to get warm and transportation. In Cleveland, city and county officials said they were working with shelters and nonprofits to find places for the homeless to stay safely. And in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, leaders said they were keeping shelters open during the daytime, and stores were donating snacks and lunches.

In Milwaukee, where there are about 900 homeless people either in shelters or living on the streets, warming centers have been opened and outreach workers are fanning out around the city, trying to convince people to come indoors.

“We’re always concerned, but especially when you can get frostbite in about eight minutes,” said Wendy Weckler, the executive director of Hope House, a shelter for families, who has helped coordinate the preparation. “The outreach workers are out looking for people, and trying to find the people who don’t usually come in and getting them somewhere safe.”

Chicago officials said scores of warming shelters were open, extra beds had been prepared, and teams of workers had been out overnight all week urging homeless people to take shelter. Libraries, police stations and community centers were being used as warming centers, and city officials were seeking help from ministers to consider opening more spots.

“No one in need of a safe or warm place to stay will be turned away,” Rahm Emanuel, Chicago’s mayor, said during a briefing on the dire weather. “No one.”

Douglas Schenkelberg, executive director of the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, said that as the extreme cold began to set in, fewer homeless people appeared to be on the streets. With all the warnings, he said, people were finding emergency housing, staying with friends and family, seeking out a bed at a homeless shelter or visiting an emergency warming center provided by the city.

The problem, Mr. Schenkelberg said, is what happens after the weather gets a little better.

“We’ll have this really bad weather through Thursday and then it will warm up some, and the scaled-up capacity will disappear, and you’ll see people back on the streets, and those people need housing,” he said. “That sense of urgency completely disappears when the crisis goes away.”

Along Michigan Avenue on Tuesday, not far from a stretch of glimmering retail stores known as Chicago’s Magnificent Mile, a man sat cross-legged on the ground under a gray blanket, a green bowl for loose change in front of him.

He said he was trying to get $20 to pay for a room he is permitted to stay in for that price. He said his name was Andre Jones, and he had a cardboard sign that read: “Homeless and cold. God Bless!”

A passing office worker, covered in down clothing and shielded under a scarf, looked over, horrified: “You should not be out,” she told him, promising to return from her office with some assistance. A passing motorist also stopped, pulled over and handed a dollar bill from his window, noting that it was far too cold to even be sitting there.

“I’ve almost got enough for a room for tonight,” he said. “Trust me, I’m going to raise it. There’s no way I’m going to be out here tonight.”

 


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