Lucy Laney High School Student Helps Provide Security for Those Displaced After Homeless Shelter Closing AUGUSTA, GA: WRDW News reported about the homeless shelter downtown, but they didn’t include the phenomenal story of the HELP project. The HELP project was started by a student who currently attends Lucy Laney High School. After hearing the tragic news of the evacuation, Kashayla Garcia, 15, decided to help. “I sat in shock as I heard the news anchor tell about the homeless shelter evacuation,” Garcia told us. Apparently, the state chose to terminate the shelter so it could be transformed into a bank. Garcia thought, “How can they throw innocent children out on the street without any remorse?” Garcia claims she was shocked. “With the lack of food and water, how can we expect the victims of this tragedy to survive?” Augusta kicked out its resident’s instead of providing rudimentary needs to the people. This fact is appalling; however, it didn’t stop Garcia’s mission. …show more content…
Garcia received a ton of emails after surrounding the town with papers, talking to local infirmaries, and speaking to numerous family members. Her school, Lucy Laney, wanted to make shelter accessible until the families found a place to live. Nurses and medical scholars from GRU wanted to contribute their amenities as well. Civilians also came forward to inquire what was needed. They began to figure out a plan to provide help for the less fortunate in a structured way, organization was the key to this assignment. Garcia speaks “We decided to call the project HELP simply because that is all we wanted to
I was researching ideas for my Eagle Scout project and wanted to make a meaningful impact on the youth in my community. The Somerset Home for Temporarily Displaced
Homelessness is defined as having no fixed place to sleep at night. This includes people staying in motels until their money runs out, those staying with friends, those staying in shelters, and those sleeping inside or out whatever space they can find to protect themselves. The number of homeless people has been growing and it has become a serious problem in our society. Every night in Canada there are thousands of people living on the streets. This type of behaviour is considered deviant because it does not reflect the norms and values of our society. In many cases the homeless people in our country are treated as total outcasts. Many of these people have severe mental disorders. Some are victims of an economy that has
Homelessness is a growing epidemic across the country. This terrible misfortune has led to many unsuspecting people leading impoverished lifestyles, and facing the horrific and heart-wrenching tragedy of abandonment. The purpose of this essay is to not only persuade the readers to get involved in ending homelessness on local and national efforts, but to embrace new and creative ways of helping to end this rapidly growing problem, by taking action to end this catastrophic situation. Also, I will demonstrate the causes and effects of the homeless resorting to violence, by using comparison and contrast to examine the views and standpoints on helping the forgotten, so that we might end this calamity once and for all. In an increasingly
November is Homeless Awareness month, and administration wanted to highlight the district’s social/emotional support that is provided to students. Stephanie Kasprzak from MCOP shared some community data, and several of our social/emotional support team members talked about the services they provide.
The team gave students a chance to discuss their situations. Danielle Stelluto experienced being homeless. She was living in Florida with an infant when she lost her job as a telemarketer. Loss money for food and couldn’t finish going to school. She couldn 't afford to feed her and her child.
A person without a home, and therefore living on the streets is defined as homeless. America has numbers of homeless people living without a home or starving from hunger. The solution to this problem would be the United States providing homeless people with permanent, affordable housing, and wraparound services. Permanent supportive housing will resolve this issue for our country.
Our senior project’s purpose is to give back to our community and feed the less fortunate families in Long Beach. Just in our city alone there are more than 53,000 homeless families. Our target market is mainly the less fortunate families but we are opening it up to other groups as well. Our motivational values such as effort, teamwork, dedication, individual worth and integrity, folds our mission together. Long Beach is considered the 9th highest district of the less fortunate families in our major cities. Families become homeless because of many reasons such as job loss, violence, divorces, and family disputes. Other reasons follow such as depression, illness and stress. We want to be able to provide meaningful essentials
Immediately I was introduced to an unimaginable degree of poverty. Hungry families were living in small rundown shacks. Soon after sunrise construction began- building a volunteer bunkhouse and renovating families homes. With growing mold, broken utilities, and overall structural deterioration, homes were unsafe living conditions for any human being, let alone a family.
Throughout the rating period, Ms. Carlene Martinez continued her GAIN Services Worker (GSW) assignment in the Homeless Case Management (HCM) Unit of the Southwest Family CalWORKs District as a Homeless Case Manager. She was responsible for assessing the needs of homeless families and at-risk of becoming homeless families obtain and retain permanent housing. She assisted families in achieving self-sufficiency through advocacy, communication and the identification and facilitation of services.
Homelessness has shown that in 2014 over 500,000 individuals have been homelessness at least one night, but the major of the count were children (henry, Coretes, Shivji, & Buck, 2014). In addition, this include 26.5 percent of individuals that were unsheltered, 33.2 percent sheltered families, 36.2 percent sheltered individual, and 4.2 percent unsheltered families. Furthermore, the count for Alabama showed that 3,115 were considered to be homeless. Disabilities individuals that may have been in psychiatric and correctional institutions are at risk for homelessness when they cannot obtain aid in housing. This will make them a target for activities prevention. Individual with disabilities may include substance abusers, acute mental illness, posttraumatic stress, or cognitive impairments (Cooper, Knott, Schaak, Sloane, & Zovistoski (2015).
Over 20% of Portland's population are homeless and living with mental disabilities, starvation, or suffering from drug and alcohol abuse. Instead of trying to help these citizens into homeless shelters, people give them money or food instead, thinking that they’re helping but in reality they’re paying for drugs or alcohol.
Something does not make sense about an issue in Central Florida’s area, or at least that is how people may perceive homelessness. Last semester, our chapter in Phi Theta Kappa conducted the Honors in Action and chose theme number three, rights and responsibilities, as our research guide. I believe that students should be aware of what affects their surroundings and become a critical thinker. To think beyond our own experiences is what helps us develop as a community. Theme three encouraged us to ask ourselves a few questions such as “what are the responsibilities of students at our college?” We found out that there was a population of homeless students at Valencia College of about three hundred people. Moreover, we found out that a considerable
Throughout the entire history of human civilization, the prevalence of homelessness has been a challenge to every nation. It might be depressing to learn that no countries today have eradicated homelessness, but the human race is never stopped from trying harder than before to tackle this prolonged issue. As the two leading economic powers, America and China have to face the challenge of reducing homelessness. According to a report written by Nation Coalition for the Homeless, “a study done by the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty which states that approximately 3.5 million people, 1.35 million of them children, are likely to experience homelessness in a given year” in America alone (National Coalition for the Homeless, July
Homelessness is a person or a family that don’t have a place to use as a house or shelter. US government provides emergency/winter shelters for homeless people living in the United States. Winter shelters are really useful for homeless people, but there is one problem about this service. States have the control of opening and closing these shelters. Before the beginning of winter, every state chooses a temperature to open winter shelters, and they open shelters when the weather is lower than the chosen temperature. For example New York City decided to open its winter shelters when the weather is colder than 32 F previous winter. Every state has a different temperature to open its shelters. Lethal hypothermia can be caused when the
Homelessness is a huge and complex issue in Montgomery county which includes veterans, children families and elderly population. Homelessness not only happens in the state of Maryland or large cities but in can happen anywhere we go. “On a single night in 2016, 549,928 people were experiencing homelessness in the United States”(Henry, 2016). There are many issues that can lead to homelessness such as lack of education, mental illness, economic and social stabilities. “Reasons for homelessness include poverty, lack affordable housing, unemployment, lack or inadequacy of government financial support, crime, violence, lack of kin support, mental illness, substance, and socially stigmatizing infectious diseases” (Hood, 2014, p. 369). However, this problem requires community and government to work together in order support and provide housing, food, protection, education and health. As a community, we should coordinate services to homeless individuals and their families by providing emergency shelter, food, clothing, transportation and some basic care. Our church came together as community in the Montgomery county to support and collectively get involved to end homelessness and hunger. Even though, Montgomery county provides services for homeless people that include: outreach, emergency shelter, transitional housing, and permanent supportive housing there are still some many needs to be meet in the community such as: knowing where to refer