| The Connection
a publication of the Georgia Coalition to End Homelessness, Inc. |
| ...keeping you up-to-date on local, state and national homeless issues | |
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Horace Sibley
presented with GCEH's prestigious
"Community Champion" Humanitarian Award |
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Thought For The Day
Take a look at those two open hands of yours. They are tools with which to serve, make friends, and reach out for the best in life. Open hands open the way to achievement. Put them to work today.
Wilfred A. Peterson | |
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Join GCEH To Bring Homeless Awareness To Georgia.
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...each year over 70,000 children and individuals become homeless in Georgia |
November 2nd- 8th, 2008 Homeless Awareness Week in Georgia " There's No Place Like Home"
November 2nd- 8th, 2008 is designated as Homeless Awareness Week in Georgia.
This year's theme, "There's No Place Like Home" reminds all Georgia residents that we all have a need for a safe and adequate place to call home.
Homeless Awareness Week is a statewide campaign to educate the public about the many reasons people are homeless, the shortage of affordable housing for low income people. And the diligent work homeless assistance providers are doing to bring relief to those most in need. The Georgia Coalition To End Homelessness is spearheading the drive. Many organizations across the state are planning day and week long activities to include:
*Awareness Marches - Get a Group Together- Large or Small *Host Mini-Awareness Walk-A-Thons at Schools and Daycares *Set-up Awareness Information Kiosks - Hand Out Fliers and Awareness Ribbons *"Sock- It to Homelessness"new sock collections *"Undie Sunday"new underwear collections *"Make Friends With The Media"- Let them know you're there !!! *Create A Local Call To Action *15 Minute Church Presentations *Posting Wish Lists in Local Merchants w/ Drop Boxes *Have a Latte-a-Day Fundraiser - Ask donors to buy a small latte a day for a homeless shelter when they buy their coffee- $2.00 a day can add up.
These are just a few ideas. Let us know what you are doing in your community. This is a great opportunity for us to get the word out that Homelessness is not someone else's problem. It's everyone's problem. We have Awareness Ribbons, Lapel Pins and Awareness Posters Available. If you need a supply, please click on the order link below or contact our office at 770-575-5785 Order Your Homeless Awareness Week Supplies
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$2 Million More To Help Prevent Atlanta Foreclosures
Federal officials said Friday that they will give $2 million to an Atlanta agency as part of an effort to aid the homeless and respond to the region's mortgage foreclosure crisis. The money to Recovery Consultants Inc., which provides substance-abuse treatment and other services, will be spread out over five years, according to Philip Mangano, executive director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. The federal government said about a month ago that it is giving the city $12.3 million to address the foreclosure problem. Atlanta has until Dec. 1 to send federal officials a plan of action. The city can apply for more money from the state Department of Community Affairs. Mangano said the money can be used to buy foreclosed homes, redevelop vacant properties or to demolish blighted buildings. At a City Hall news conference, Mayor Shirley Franklin talked about her administration's efforts to help the homeless and to limit the destructiveness of foreclosures to the city. She said the city will look at how it can help working families, noting that an increasing number of homeless are renters who've paid their rent on time, but whose landlords had fallen into foreclosure. "Our challenge is to demonstrate that this program can succeed," the mayor said. "This is a way to stop the bleeding." Atlanta Planning and Community Development Commissioner James Shelby said his office constantly receives calls from residents complaining about abandoned homes, which create quality-of-life problems such as overgrown weeds and vagrants hanging out in the homes, often doing drugs or stealing materials from homes under construction. Shelby said foreclosures have "become an epidemic in our city." Last year, city code enforcement workers put notices on about 1,200 vacant homes, alerting police that no one should be inside them. The city is on pace to double that number this year, according to Tenee Hawkins, Shelby's spokeswoman.
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| Columbus Pastor Helps Homeless Families
A Columbus Pastor is reaching out to many families in these desperate times. Pastor Millie Johnson who hopes many other churches and organizations would do the same. "Since we became homeless and weren't sure if we were going to be on the railroad tracks, because of my disability I was worried and then we came here and Pastor is showing us the way." Debra Johnson said. Lee Alverson and his family moved to Columbus a month ago looking to get a fresh start. Alverson explained, "I moved here for new opportunities you know maybe better job opportunities, maybe a better way of living." But things didn't go as they planned. "But since I've gotten here, I just haven't had any luck with any jobs. I've put in probably any where from 15 to 20 applications," Alverson added. And without Pastor Johnson's church and outreach, they say they would have to result to living on the streets. And they said words aren't enough to thank her for all of her help and support. "I mean I'm lost for words, this lady it's like God put here and bought us to her. It's like I don't even know. She has done so much," Johnson stated. Pastor Johnson's out reach is a non-profit organization where she takes in donated items from the community and in turn sell them to purchase food for families in need.
Pastor Johnson added, "When you have an organization, what is a more disaster?" Than somebody out walking the street, do you have to wait until the wind or storm blow their houses down, to say it's a disaster? It is a disaster when you see people who ain't got no home." And Johnson says she needs help to help more people who are in need. For more information on Pastor Johnson's Fresh Start Ministries call 706-689-8000.
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Georgia Supreme Court: Sex Offender Law Is Unfair To Homeless
Georgia's top court ruled Monday that a provision in Georgia's strict new sex offender law is unconstitutional because it fails to tell homeless offenders how they can comply with the law.
The law is designed to keep sex offenders away from children by monitoring how close they live to schools, parks and other spots where kids gather. But critics say it unfairly subjects homeless offenders to a life sentence if they fail to register a home address. The Georgia Supreme Court's 6-1 decision Monday found the law's registration requirements were "unconstitutionally vague." The opinion also held that homeless offenders are not exempt from the statute, and suggested special reporting requirements for the homeless.
The case involves William James Santos, a homeless man and convicted sex offender who was kicked out of a Gainesville homeless shelter in July 2006 and was arrested three months later on charges he failed to register with Georgia's sex offender list. His lawyers say the law creates a guessing game for Santos and other homeless offenders because it bars them from giving a post office box or simply saying they are homeless. They argued that homeless offenders will become victims of the tough penalties which call for a mandatory life in prison sentence for offenders who fail to register their address for a second time.
Prosecutors warn that offenders could take advantage of the loophole and report themselves as homeless to defeat the purpose of the measure. Assistant district attorney Vanessa Sykes conceded during the hearing that the measure can lead to a cumbersome process. Homeless offenders who move from spot to spot each night would have to notify the local sheriff's department each time, she said.
The court's 7-page ruling concluded that address registration requirements for Santos and other homeless offenders with no addresses are unconstitutional. But it made clear that it does not exempt homeless offenders from reporting other information required by the statute, nor does it exempt those who are able to provide an address such as a shelter. It cites five states where registration laws have special provisions for the homeless, including California, which requires transient offenders with no address to report their whereabouts to law enforcement officials each month. But the Georgia statute offers homeless sex offenders without an address no guidance on how to register, the ruling says, "thus leaving them to guess as to how to achieve compliance with the statute's reporting provisions."
In his dissent, Justice George Carley contended that the law does not require a sex offender to have an address, but only to report the address if he has one. He urged state legislators to enact more specific registration requirements for offenders without an address. The Santos challenge is among a growing number of cases targeting Georgia's sex offender law, which sponsors declared one of the toughest in the nation when it was adopted in 2006. It bans sex offenders from living, working or loitering within 1,000 feet of just about anywhere children gather. That includes schools, churches, parks, gyms, swimming pools or one of the state's 150,000 school bus stops. Since it was adopted, though, it has been under attack.
The Georgia Supreme Court struck down an earlier version of the law in November 2007, ruling that it failed to protect the property rights of sex offenders because it would have forced them to move if a facility catering to children opens near their home. Legislators have retooled the measure to meet the court's concerns, but other provisions are now in critics' crosshairs. The Georgia court in June heard arguments targeting a provision that mandates a life prison sentence for sex offenders who twice fail to register. A ruling could come within weeks. And federal judges are considering a lawsuit that claims a provision banning sex offenders from volunteering at churches is illegal and another that challenges a part of the law that would evict offenders who live near churches and school bus stops.
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GCEH Honors 2008 Humanitarians
The Georgia Coalition to End Homelessness was proud to honor four of Georgia's outstanding humanitarians at the 4th Annual 2008 Humanitarian Awards Celebration on October 24, 2008 at Callaway Gardens Resort in Pine Mountain, Georgia.
This year's recipients :
- Horace Sibley - Atlanta - 2008 Community Champion Award
- D. Renee Kennedy - Savannah - The 2008 Robert Vincent Smith Volunteer of the Year Award
- Sandra Morris - Carrollton - The 2008 Essential Piece Award
- Rainbow Village Inc. - Norcross - The 2008 Bridge Builder Award
Each year the GCEH Humanitarian Awards seek to identify and recognize individuals and organizations in the State of Georgia that are outstanding models of service, collaboration and leadership. This year's award recipients are those who are involved in innovative or unique programs. These individuals and programs support and assist homeless people with exceptional service provision that ultimately strives to end homelessness throughout our state.
This years award keynote was given by Philip Mangano, The Executive Director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. GCEH's special guest Zack Bonner, Founder of the Little Red Wagon Foundation also gave a heartwarming presentation.
The Community Champion Award is the Georgia Coalition To End Homelessness' only award that it is not presented annually. It is reserved for times when an individual has made a significant contribution to ending homelessness. The Robert Vincent Smith Volunteer of the Year Award, The Essencial Piece Award and The Bridge Builder Award are all presented annually to individuals and programs that provide exceptional services to those in need.
The staff and Board of Directors wish to congratulate each of the award recipients and commend them for their exemplary service to those that are hurting and homeless throughout our state.
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Zack's 280 Mile Walk For Homeless Kids
Ten-year old Zach Bonner of Tampa, FL has decided to do something to make other people more aware of the growing problem, so he walks. "I walk for the kids who do not have a voice," said Zack
Zack and his mother left their home in Tampa, over two weeks ago and are heading to the capitol in Atlanta, ON FOOT. "I decided a couple of years ago that I wanted to help homeless youth. We have fixed up backpacks filled with food and personal items for those in need," Bonner said
When Zack reaches the capitol in Atlanta his walk will total 280 miles. His goal is to be able to raise awareness and educate citizens in every town he and his mother stop in. Part of the funds he collects will be going to the Macon Habitat for Humanity. He also assists with the Georgia Coalition to End Homelessness. It is his hope that once in Atlanta, he can help the Georgia Coalition To End Homelessness start an enrichment program for kids living in low income housing, homeless shelters and transitional housing. Zack will end his walk on Nov. 17 with the final mile being from Turner Field to the capitol. "We are so excited to share in Zacks final mile" "We have shared Zack's progress across the State of Georgia with our vast statewide network" said Katheryn Preston, Executive Director of the Coalition.
" TV stations and reporters have had quite a time trying to keep up with this energetic young man". "We hope everyone will come out and join us at Turner Field on November 17th."
Everyone is invited to join Zack, all his walk-mates and the Georgia Coalition To End Homelessness in his walk and at a press conference and celebration at the conclusion of his walk on the steps of the Georgia Capitol on November 17th.. Those who are interested can track Zach's progress or make a donation by logging on to www.ZachTracker.com |
Ex-Homeless Man Hopes To Raise $1 Million in Atlanta
The 2006 Philanthropist of the Year from Fort Worth, Texas, was in Atlanta. He came to town with his best friend, a well-heeled international art dealer. Denver Moore knew well the grand hotel where 800 of Fort Worth's wealthier residents turned out to honor him two years ago. He'd slept on the grate out back on plenty of cold nights.
"You never know whose eyes God is going to be watching you out of," Moore, a homeless man turned homeless-shelter volunteer, told a similarly packed ballroom in Atlanta. The former sharecropper, prisoner and resident of the streets was the keynote speaker at "Courage to Care," a luncheon benefiting about 30 area agencies that serve metro Atlanta's homeless population.
Moore and art dealer Ron Hall met a decade ago when Hall and his wife started volunteering at a shelter in Fort Worth. The two men co-authored a book, "Same Kind of Different as Me," that tells their story. Trinity Community Ministries board member David Smith invited Moore and Hall to Atlanta after reading their book. Smith said he'd originally hoped a few hundred folks might come together and raise perhaps $200,000.
"God had a much bigger plan than me," Smith told the crowd of 2,600 at the Georgia World Congress Center. Organizers hope "Courage to Care" will raise $1 million. Trinity Community Ministries hosted the luncheon along with Atlanta Day Shelter for Women and Children, Samaritan House, Midtown Assistance Center, Love Thy Neighbor, Jerusalem House, Crossroads Community Ministries, Georgia Law Center for the Homeless, Atlanta Union Mission, St. Joseph's Mercy Care, Atlanta Enterprise Center, First Step Staffing and Families First.
A number of other agencies that serve homeless clients participated by hosting tables and working the volunteer fair that followed the luncheon, where guests ate simple meals of sandwiches, apples and cookies from plastic boxes.Hall and Moore say this was the largest crowd they've addressed.
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