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A Cot in a Corner Provides Respite and Rest

Louisa never dreamed she would begin her school day with a nap. But, after spending restless nights in the back seat of her mother's car, to have access to a quiet place to sleep at school is crucial. When overcome by lack of sleep during her lessons, Louisa is able to curl up on one of the five cots set up in a corner of her public elementary school's library. Louisa's situation is not unusual in hard-hit areas of Massachusetts. Lost jobs and foreclosures uproot families, force children to transfer from one school to another and compound learning and developmental issues. As educators and advocates for impoverished people, Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur are deeply concerned about the welfare of homeless children.
[Please note: The above photo is representational only.]
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Homeless Teens on Their Own...
 In December 2011, the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education estimated that 5,920 teens in Massachusetts were living on their own. These teens often hold down full- and part-time minimum wage jobs (sometimes both at once) and "couch-hop" from one friend's home to another while attempting to finish high school.
On staff at the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless since 1995, Sister of Notre Dame de Namur Linda Bessom is all too aware of how vulnerable these teens are to despair and academic failure. She also knows that they make up a fraction of the 50,000+ Massachusetts public school students with no fixed address. |