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Updated: December 3, 2020, 6:05 PM

De Blasio’s $1B NYPD cut left 2,500 homeless complaints unanswered

By Nolan Hicks, Craig McCarthy, Georgett Roberts and Bruce Golding

Homeless people living on the city’s streets are being left out in the cold — and out of control — due to Mayor de Blasio’s decision to cut $1 billion from the NYPD’s budget, The Post has learned.

Nearly 2,500 complaints to 311 about vagrants desperately needing help or causing problems have been closed without any action by cops who no longer have jurisdiction, according to official data obtained by The Post.

Before de Blasio stripped the NYPD of $4.5 million a year for its Homeless Outreach Unit, the monthly number of those cases was just 79 in June, the statistics show.

But following the budgetary move — prompted by protesters who camped out in Lower Manhattan to demand that Hizzoner “defund the police” — it immediately skyrocketed more than 550 percent, to 437, in July.

The monthly figures have remained in triple digits ever since, reaching a high of 681 in August and totaling 2,486 in just the past five months.

Sources blamed City Hall for failing to have the Department of Homeless Services take over the complaints, as de Blasio promised when he detailed his cuts to the NYPD’s budget.

At the time, de Blasio claimed that civilian workers “can handle this work and that transition will happen in the course of this fiscal year.”

But with temperatures dropping as winter settles in, no one has replaced the 86 cops formerly assigned to the since-disbanded Homeless Outreach Unit, sources said.

“City Hall took the responsibility away from the [Police] Department but the city never developed or implemented the plan by DHS to handle additional homelessness calls,” an official familiar with the situation said.

The block hardest hit by the official inaction is Manhattan’s West 72nd Street between Broadway and West End Avenue, where the NYPD closed out 57 complaints without responding, according to the 311 data.

Residents said they’d noticed the change that’s taken place since June, with one complaining about an unhinged homeless man who’s been plaguing the area lately.

“He is quite vociferous. He yells and he screams,” said Nancy Lowe, 90, who’s lived in the neighborhood since 1968.

“It was getting better but now it’s getting worse. The police do not come around anymore.”

Another woman who’s lived in the area for 68 years said she’d seen “about an 80 to 90 percent spike” in the number of homeless people.

“Nobody is doing anything. It’s just a deterioration of the neighborhood,” said the woman, who gave her name as Grace M.

“It seems like what I saw in the ‘80s.”

On Thursday afternoon, The Post saw a woman huddled under a mound of blankets on the sidewalk near the bus stop on West 72nd Street near Broadway.

A woman called 311 to get her some help, but after 45 minutes, none had arrived.

NYPD union leaders blasted de Blasio and the City Council — which adopted his budget plan — over the situation.

“There’s no doubt that the city’s ever-increasing homeless population deserves proper services, but the ill-advised rush by politicians to ‘defund the police’ comes with consequences,” Detectives’ Endowment Association President Paul DiGiacomo said.

“Now that these same elected officials have moved on to the next trending hashtag — New Yorkers are left to suffer.”

Police Benevolent Association President Pat Lynch said, “Like so many other issues, homeless outreach landed in cops’ laps because the politicians had no other plan to solve the problem.”

“Now they’re taking responsibilities and resources away from the NYPD, but they still don’t have a plan,” he added.

“Homeless New Yorkers – and all New Yorkers – are suffering from City Hall’s lack of leadership, lack of courage, lack of any answer other than ‘blame the cops.’”

A former top de Blasio administration official accused the NYPD of refusing to refer the cases to DHS, saying it left hundreds of people on the streets without help.

“They never wanted to be involved in anything related to DHS,” the ex-official said.

“After the budget, they were just like. ‘We’re just not going to do what we don’t want to do.”

A de Blasio spokeswoman didn’t deny that the complaints went unaddressed and instead offered a vague comment about overall 311 homeless calls.

“The vast number of 311 calls expressing concerns about street conditions continue to be addressed, even amid the City’s new vision for homeless outreach and the ongoing transition between city agencies,” said first deputy press secretary Avery Cohen in response to questions from The Post.

A spokesperson for Council Speaker Corey Johnson (D-Manhattan) didn’t return a request for comment.