(For air on M.E. 6-1-04) The Pawlenty Administration is moving ahead with its plan to end long-term homelessness in Minnesota. Legislators this session didn't approve $20-million dollars for the proposal's first-phase. But the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency says 59 apartments are already being developed using money the agency has re-directed from its own budget. Over the next seven years, the administration hopes to build or refurbish 4000 apartments to house the state's most chronically homeless residents. Homeless advocates generally welcome the idea, but some wonder if it's targeting one group at the expense of another. Minnesota Public Radio's Lorna Benson reports.