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Showing posts with label homeless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeless. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2020

CAPITO, MANCHIN ANNOUNCE VETERAN HOMELESS PREVENTION GRANTS ACROSS WEST VIRGINIA

Washington, D.C. - August 22, 2020 - (Ponder America's Homeless) -- U.S. Senators Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), members of the Senate Appropriations Committee, today announced $898,778 and four Per Diem Only (PDO) grants from the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) for community organizations to assist homeless veterans in West Virginia. This funding is made available through the VA’s Grant Per Diem (GPD) program and will provide transitional housing and supportive services for homeless veterans with the goal of helping homeless veterans achieve residential stability, increase their skill levels, and obtain greater self-determination.

“Our veterans in West Virginia deserve our full support, especially those who have fallen on hard times,” said Senator Capito. “GPD grants from the VA allow organizations to receive the optimal amount of funding needed, providing them the ability to offer resources to more veterans. It is important that we give our veterans the tools they need get back on their feet and find stability within their communities. I will continue to advocate for more funding to strengthen the lives of veterans across our state.”

“It is simply unacceptable that many of our brave Veterans who have sacrificed so much for our country do not have a roof over their head at night,” said Senator Manchin. “This funding will help organizations across West Virginia support these national heroes and provide them with the basic needs they are entitled to. It’s the least we can do for their unwavering service and sacrifice. As a member of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and the Senate Appropriations Committee, I will continue to fight to make sure our Veterans have the support they need and fought for.”


According to the VA, the GPD program has provided veterans who are homeless with community-based transitional housing and supportive services since 1994. The number of veterans experiencing homelessness in the U.S. has declined by 50 percent since 2010 — resulting from the GPD program and other VA efforts.

Sunday, August 9, 2020

Socks for the Homeless


The Ponder is campaigning for donations in order to provide Socks for the Homeless.

$2.00 will buy Three pairs of socks for a homeless person.

It's not much. And, it is something that the homeless REALLY appreciate!

All socks will be delivered to the Randy Sam's Homeless Shelter for distribution!

Thank you!





Saturday, May 23, 2020

Woman Barricaded Inside Oakland Motel Leaves Peacefully After 16-Hour Protest


Source: KQED

Stefani Echevarría-Fenn had chained herself to security bars outside a window at the Palms Motel in Oakland to protest the lack of hotel rooms for people experiencing homelessness. Supporters glued the door shut and used furniture to block the entrance.

She and supporters have been paying to house 14 homeless people in hotels for the past few weeks, including many who are older and have serious health conditions. But their money was running out, and they want the city of Oakland to step in.
Read more...

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) Adopts New Guiding Principles and Practices for Unsheltered Homelessness

Los Angeles, CA - March 22, 2020 - (Ponder America's Homeless) -- On February 28, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) adopted new policy that calls for decriminalizing life-sustaining survival actions of the more than 40,000 Los Angelenos who are experiencing unsheltered homelessness.

The policy, entitled Guiding Principles and Practices for Local Responses to Unsheltered Homelessness, outlines principles that affirm the civil rights of those experiencing homelessness. This guidance cites the Encampment Principles and Practices outlined in the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty’s 2017 Tent City, USA: The Growth of America’s Homeless Encampments and How Communities are Responding report, and calls for fair policies that prioritize provision of housing and services and discourage the use of the criminal justice system in addressing homelessness. The document shows the commitment of the County to serve those experiencing unsheltered homelessness with respect, dignity, and empathy.

“This new guidance is an important step forward in reversing destructive, ineffective and unconstitutional laws and policies that criminalize homeless people simply for existing,” said Maria Foscarinis, executive director of the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty. “Our goal now is for the county and cities within it to continue to move forward by ensuring the human right to housing for all its homeless residents, and we stand ready to help them do that.”

According to the guiding document: “Municipal ordinances should not criminalize homelessness. Ordinances that limit necessary, life-sustaining activities such as sitting, sleeping, or eating in public spaces unfairly target people living on the streets. In the absence of adequate alternative or private places to undertake those activities, people have a right to perform these activities in public.”

The guidance originates from “recent court decisions and research into promising practices both locally and nationally.” These court rulings include last September’s Martin v. Boise decision in the 9th Circuit, and last week’s settlement in Mitchell v. Los Angeles. The guidance will also support LAHSA in obtaining additional federal funding to end homelessness, thanks to grant incentives in recent Housing & Urban Development funding applications.

“We are thrilled LAHSA has put on paper the best practices that we researched from across the country and globe on addressing unsheltered homelessness through housing, not handcuffs, and look forward to seeing them implemented,” said Eric Tars, legal director at the Law Center. “We are happy to support to the efforts of our local partners, including LA Community Action Network, Legal Aid Foundation of LA, Neighborhood Legal Services of LA, and the Law Offices of Carol Sobel, whose pressure in the streets, council chambers, and courts all contributed to the adoption of this precedent-setting document by LAHSA.”

Friday, February 14, 2020

TIny Homes Program Provides Transitional Housing


Hayward, CA - February 14, 2020 - (Ponder America's Homeless) -- First Presbyterian Church of Hayward partnered with HomeAid Northern California, CoBuild and Alameda County to open the Tiny Homes project today, providing transitional housing for those experiencing homelessness in Hayward and Alameda County.

“I can’t express how much the Tiny Homes program will help me and others get into permanent housing,” shared new tenant, [insert first and last name] of Hayward. “It’s comforting and encouraging to know there are people in our community willing to help out in such a life-changing way. And everyone’s been so kind and helpful throughout this entire process.”

The first tenants begin moving in today will occupy all six of the Tiny Homes available on the First Presbyterian Church of Hayward property.

“Tiny Homes is truly a labor of love showcasing how the private sector, local government and non-profit can partner together to meet the immediate needs of our local community in a big way,” shared Chizu Buckalew, community development director, First Presbyterian Church of Hayward. “Tiny Homes will provide a warm, safe and stable place for the homeless to begin their journey toward more permanent housing and we are here to do everything we can to help.”

HomeAid is proud to support First Presbyterian Church of Hayward with 6 Builder Captains who stepped up to build the 6 Tiny Homes over a 6 week period. “I am so impressed and inspired by the support of the building industry to house those in need,” said HomeAid Executive Director Cheryl O’Connor.

First Presbyterian Church of Hayward spearheaded the joint effort as part of its ongoing support, care and outreach for the displaced and homeless community in Alameda County. The church provides a winter shelter from December 1 until April 30th (funded by Alameda County), a Park Out program allowing homeless to park overnight in the parking lot, meals (breakfasts on Sunday mornings and dinners on select evenings) and a Resource Center during the week.

For more information about the Tiny Homes program and how to donate, please Click HERE

About First Presbyterian Church of Hayward

Located in the East Bay, we are a multi-ethnic, multi-socioeconomic, multi-generational, Christian community of faith where anyone can come as he, she or they are. We welcome every tribe, nation, language, and people; whether you live in the hills, valleys or in your car; work in Silicon Valley or are on welfare, vote Republican or Democrat, are gay or straight, have a morally upright lifestyle or a loose one, sinner or saint. Come as you are! God loves you and we are so glad that you are checking out our missional family.

About HomeAid Northern California

HomeAid Northern California has completed 45 projects worth more than $21 million that provide critical shelter capacity for more than 8,000 people experiencing homelessness. HomeAid brings together the residential homebuilding industry’s resources and expertise with those of homelessness service providers. Combined, the residential industry has donated more than $11 million in material and labor and worked with 20 homeless service providers throughout the Bay Area. For more information about HomeAid Northern California, visit www.homeaidnc.org.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Rep. Mike Levin Leads Hearing on Veteran Homelessness with Testimony from San Diego-Area Organizations

Washington, D.C. - January 15, 2020 - (Ponder America's Homeless) -- U.S. Representative Mike Levin (D-CA) led a hearing of the House Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity to address veteran homelessness, including testimony from Mr. Greg Anglea, CEO of Interfaith Community Services in Escondido, CA, and Ms. Tamera Kohler, CEO of the San Diego Regional Task Force on the Homeless. The hearing examined access to the Housing and Urban Development (HUD) – Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH) program in urban, suburban, rural, and tribal communities, and worked to determine where bottlenecks exist in delivering resources in communities of all sizes.

“Today’s hearing has touched on two of the issues that are most important to me and to my district, and I would imagine to many of my colleagues as well. One is improving services for veterans; the other is reducing homelessness… I am encouraged by a lot of what I’ve heard today from you, our experts in the field, as well as from HUD and the VA. I thank all of our witnesses again, particularly, those coming from North County San Diego in our District for providing their expertise and for the outstanding work you continue to do,” said Rep. Levin.

“We’ve highlighted that while HUD-VASH is working – and we have demonstrated results that it’s working – it can be improved to work even better.. I’m very hopeful about this legislation that we passed earlier this week to expand eligibility to OTH discharges. I’m very hopeful that given the broad bipartisan support that that legislation had this week that we can have them take it up in the Senate… No one who sacrifices so much to serve our country should ever have to worry about having a place to live,” Rep. Levin added.

“Nowhere is the struggle more real than here in California as those experiencing homelessness tonight are more likely to be unsheltered than sheltered or housed,” said Ms. Kohler. “We need to return dignity to our citizens and communities, and remove the demoralizing effects homelessness has on communities that struggle to meet the needs of its most vulnerable citizens and veterans.”

“The introduction of HUD-VASH in 2008, along with additional housing-focused interventions like Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF), is directly responsible for the dramatic, nearly 50% reduction in Veterans experiencing homelessness over the last decade, from 76,329 Veterans in 2010 to 37,085 in 2019, per the annual Point In Time Count,” said Mr. Anglea. “That’s the good news. The bad news is that more than 37,000 men and women who sacrificed to protect our country are still struggling in homelessness. They answered the call to service, yet their country is now failing to help them in their time of crisis. This is unacceptable. As a nation, we must do better.”

Last week, Rep. Levin hosted Vince Hall, CEO of Feeding San Diego, and Denise Hollywood, Chief Community and Programs Officer of Blue Star Families in Encinitas for an Economic Opportunity Subcommittee hearing on food insecurity among veterans.


Rep. Susie Lee Helps Advance Bipartisan Bill to Support Nevada Homeless Youth

Washington, D.C. - January 15, 2020 - (Ponder America's Homeless) -- House Committee on Education and Labor member U.S. Rep. Susie Lee (Nev.-03) joined her committee colleagues in passing through committee the Runaway and Homeless Youth and Trafficking Prevention Act of 2019 (H.R. 5191)—a bipartisan proposal to reauthorize the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act of 1974 and empower states to strengthen and expand services for young people living through homelessness.

“I can’t think of a more tragic situation than a child without a bed to sleep in,” said Rep. Lee. “Whether the cause is neglect, trauma, disability, or discrimination, especially LGBTQ+ youth, we must provide comprehensive services to help them rebuild their lives. We cannot afford to waste their futures.

“I started my career in Nevada running the state’s first comprehensive homeless crisis intervention center,” Rep. Lee continued. “I saw first-hand how important comprehensive services are to help get families and youth into permanent housing. The bill will help communities like Clark County, which has seen a 40 percent increase in unaccompanied homeless minors from 2018 to 2019. We must act now.”

BACKGROUND: In addition to reauthorizing funding for federal youth homelessness programs, the Runaway and Homeless Youth and Trafficking Prevention Act of 2019:

  • Puts a greater focus on trauma-informed services;
  • Prioritizes reaching vulnerable homeless youth living in the streets, including those who have experienced human trafficking; and,
  • Ensures that federal programs for homeless youth do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.

  • To read the fact sheet on the Runaway and Homeless Youth and Trafficking Prevention Act of 2019, click here.

    Sunday, October 27, 2019

    Celebrating My Birthday With Jesus

    Hello, World!

    Today, I went to Three Crosses Church in New Boston, where my Uncle Aubrey McRae leads the congregation in worship! It was kind've like a mini-family reunion. I got to see some cousins I haven't seen in a long time, as well as Aunts and Uncles, and my mom and Step-dad were there, too!

    My Uncle Aubrey and I have always had a long-standing tradition because our birthday is on the same day of the year, October 30. We race to see who can call each other first to say "Happy Birthday!"

    One year, my ex-husband woke me at 5 A.M. saying I had an important phone call. My Uncle Aubrey was on the phone and said, "HAHAHAHAHA! I BEAT YOU! HAPPY BIRTHDAY!" LOL

    But, when he asked about birthdays today, he said mine didn't count until next week. LOL So, I'll have to wait til next week since it isn't until Wednesday, to have him sing Happy Birthday to me at church. LOL

    After church, I decided to "step out in faith" and spend some of my money on celebrating my new job and my birthday, with Jesus. I would have taken the guys, but I couldn't afford both of them, and it wouldn't have been fair to only take one of them. So, I went to Randy Sam's Homeless Shelter and picked up Miss Wanda.

    I actually went to school with her. So, I was blessed to be able to give her my testimony and enjoy The One Buffet with her.

    I was a pig...and I talked a lot. LOL...I told her all of my testimony while we ate. I think Jesus would have wanted me to. I told her, "God gave me a story to tell, so I HAVE to!"

    She has been at the shelter for about a month. The Shelter manager said she was one of her hardest workers, and if anyone deserved a blessing like that, SHE did! And I enjoyed every minute of it!

    In the Bible, Jesus says that when you "do unto the least of these, my children, ye also do unto me!" So, I was honored to take "Jesus" to dinner with me today!

    Have a blessed day!

    (This is Wanda King. And this is what Jesus looks like today. I am out on a date with Jesus to celebrate my new job and my birthday!)

    Thursday, August 15, 2019

    Feeding Pets of the Homeless Week (August 11-17)


    Feeding Pets of the Homeless is the only national animal organization focused completely on feeding and providing emergency veterinary care to pets of the homeless.

    Unconditional Love – Loyalty – Companionship – Protection
    The economy is healing but the homeless situation is not. Once a person lands in homelessness it is a daily struggle to get out. With a pet it becomes more difficult. Can you help?

    Check out "Pets of the Homeless" website to find out how YOU can help!

    Click HERE

    Thursday, June 6, 2019

    The Least of These

    This is a great documentary about Homelessness in America. Check it out!

    "Most people don't realize that without a job, in a couple of weeks, you will find yourself in the same situation I'm in..."


    Tuesday, June 4, 2019

    Tucson hotel repurposed as shelter focused on giving dignity to homeless


    Source: AZ Central

    A former Tucson hotel has been transformed into a one-stop center for people experiencing homelessness.

    The H.S. Lopez Family Foundation Center of Opportunity opened June 3 in the location of what used to be a Radisson on 4550 S. Palo Verde Road. The center will offer 350 beds, 1,000 hot meals a day, workforce development, medical and dental services, a men's rehabilitation center and much more.

    Read more...

    Wednesday, May 29, 2019

    12-year-old’s charity helps the homeless in LA and Chicago

    Meet Khloe. She's twelve years old. She started helping the homeless at the age of 8. She once raised over $65,000 for the Salvation Army over night.

    If this child can do it, what more can we, as adults, do?

    Shonda Ponder is selling Avon. 10% of all her sales goes toward helping the homeless in America. You can order online and have the order shipped directly to you.

    Source: MSN News
    May 28, 2019
    Meet Khloe Thompson, the 12-year-old founder of Khloe Kares on a mission to serve those less fortunate in Los Angeles. It all started when she was just 8, and four years later, her passion for serving others has grown even stronger.

    Read more...



    Thursday, May 23, 2019

    This woman offers makeovers to homeless people on Skid Row

    This is an inspirational story of a woman who uses what she knows to help the Homeless. I love stories like this. It represents someone who does their part to make life better right where they are.

    This woman offers makeovers to homeless people on Skid Row
    Source: Business Insider
    May 1, 2019
    I think that makeup and hair and showers builds self-esteem, and I think like anyone, when your self-esteem is high, you feel like you can do anything, and getting off the streets has to be one of the hardest things that they are going to face in their life or encounter in their life. So feeling good is the first step to healing. So I think makeup, hair, showers, just conversation, friendship, and food, anything that makes you feel good is the first step of healing. Get it Mama, get it. OK, come on.

    Read more...



    Thursday, April 11, 2019

    Could ‘pallet shelters’ help solve Seattle’s homeless crisis?

    Seattle Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda wants the city to consider a new option in the fight against homelessness. On Thursday, she hosted a demonstration of a “pallet shelter” outside Seattle City Hall.

    The shelters are manufactured by Pallet in Everett and can be assembled without tools in 20-30 minutes. The structures can be outfitted with electricity, heat, air conditioning, and a locking door.


    “We are past three years of a declared state of emergency in this city,” Mosqueda said. “We have 4,500 people who are living outside without any shelter in our region, and we have not built the housing or the shelter to the capacity we need.”

    Read more about this at K5 News by clicking HERE

    Beanies for the Homeless



    We are collecting donations in order to give head gear to the homeless.  These beanies are warm in cold weather and designed to provide comfort. Will you help us? One donation of $5.00 will provide Two Caps.







    WELOME

    I am looking forward to bringing you information that can help you as you struggle financially so the experience isn't as hard as it seems. Just because you are homeless, or struggling, out of work, disabled or any other number of problems that seem to keep you down, it does not mean you stop living. And you can live abundantly with what little you have!

    This blog gives you resources to find what you need to live another day!

    There is hope. It's all around you. With God, and good people who act as His hands and feet, ANYTHING is possible!

    I pray this blog helps bring hope to those in need, and helps others realize ways that they can help.