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| Kate Wright sends this news about a fundraiser sponsored by the organization she leads, Habitat for Humanity of Laramie County. I was on Habitat's first board back in 1992-93. I don't have much in the way of jewels to offer but there must be hundreds of you out there who do. The proceeds from Jump into Jewels will benefit Habitat's Women's Build Project that will build a home for a hard-working Cheyenne family. Kate urges you to donate your new and gently used jewelry and accessories to the cause. The event is free and open to the public from noon until 6 p.m. A Champagne Brunch Preview Party will be held from 10 a.m.-noon. Tickets to the preview party are $15. |
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Habitat for Humanity of Laramie County holds "Jump Into Jewels" fundraiser April 27
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Occupy Fort Collins holds a "Coats, Cans and Cash" fund-raiser Jan. 29 at Avo's
Thursday, December 01, 2011
In December, foreclose on banks, not our homes
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| December Occupy events focus on housing and homelessness. This comes from Occupy Denver |
Monday, November 28, 2011
This year, Homeless Persons' Memorial Day affects more of us than ever
"The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich and the poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread" (from Le Lys Rouge).Alas, the homeless have always (and will always) be with us.
Last night's CBS “60 Minutes” had a story on Central Florida families living in their vehicles. On most Orlando nights, you can get away with sleeping in your car and not having to use all of your gas on powering the heater. That’s not true in Wyoming.
Most homeless don’t have the benefit of a car. They sleep under bridges and in parks. Sunday's Denver Post had an article about an increasing number of people sleeping out each night on the downtown 16th Street Mall. They bed down under the metal bison sculptures or stretch out under benches. Outreach workers last summer regularly counted more than 100 people per night bunking down at the mall. While a city effort to end homelessness in Denver called Operation Road Home has had some success, the problem continues to grow while federal and state funding continues to shrink.
Some cities accuse Occupy movements of being nothing but homeless encampments, and have used that as an excuse to evict occupiers (the law's "majestic equality" mentioned by France). The Nov. 1 New York Magazine talked about the uneasy alliance between Occupy protests and the homeless, some of whom are more interested in food and shelter than in political statements.
Foreclosures and evictions by big banks have forced thousands of people out of their homes. Drug addiction, alcoholism and mental illness also are a part in the problem. That said, there’s no excuse for people freezing to death out on our streets. Awareness is crucial. More needs to be done. To that end, the Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless sponsors Homeless Memorial Day every year. Here are the details:
Homeless Memorial Day will take place this year on December 21 at noon in front of the State Capitol Building. Recognition of those who died homeless on the streets of Cheyenne will take place with the tolling of a bell by Rev. Rick Veit, St. Marks Episcopal Church. Other speakers will include Virginia Sellner, Director, Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless, Richard McCullough, Crossroads Clinic/Community Action Homeless Outreach Program, Rabbi Harley Karz-Wagman, Mt. Sinai Synagogue. Music will include Christmas Carols and Hanukkah songs. The Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless has sponsored this event in Cheyenne since it beginning in 1990. This is the 22nd Homeless Memorial Day event for Cheyenne and the rest of the country. In the 1980s a small group of cities remembered those who died on the streets but the events were not organized. In 1990 the National Coalition for the Homeless and the National Healthcare for the Homeless Council organized the event and began holding memorials on December 21st each year -- the longest day of the year and frequently the coldest day of the year in many communities. A small number of cities participated in the 1990 event and it has grown each year since then. In 2010 there were 141 cities participating and approximately 1,900 homeless individuals remembered.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Evening at Bas Bleu Theatre on Nov. 17 will help the homeless
Friday, July 08, 2011
Do some good this summer at Habitat house build and UPLIFT's mega-gigantic parking lot sale
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| Habitat volunteers |
Turned on Channel 5's morning show today to see Misty Heil and Kyle Aiton promoting the Habitat for Humanity house build. This new duplex is going up at 3823 Messenger Court. Habitat encourages volunteers to wear work-appropriate clothing and closed-toed shoes. Food and beverages will be provided for volunteers on Saturdays. Beverages are provided on Sundays.
On Saturday, Aug. 6, 8 a.m.-noon., UPLIFT of Wyoming is holding its Cheyenne Yard Sale in the parking lot of the Oregon Trail Bank on the corner of College Drive and Lincolnway. Lots of goods for sale. Prizes, and a car wash too. This is UPLIFT"s big fund-raiser for 2011. I've been a board member of this very active non-profit organization since 1998. UPLIFT's mission: "Encouraging success and stability for children and youth with or at risk of emotional, behavioral, learning, developmental, or physical disorders at home, school and in the community." A tall order, considering the huge needs in this very rural state of 97,000 square miles. UPLIFT has offices statewide and, in the past six months, its small staff has assisted 576 youth in 21 counties. Those are kids that would fall through the cracks if it wasn't for UPLIFT services funded by state and federal government agencies and donations from good people like you. A true public-private partnership. Come to this yard/parking lot sale or donate online at http://www.upliftwy.org.
Remember that state and federal funds are drying up in this very strange political climate. The State of Wyoming is raking in the dough ($50 million surplus at last count) but administrators are under the gun to cut spending so that the Tea Party won't get mad and field its own slate of selfish, mean-spirited ultra-right-wingers in 2012. Not sure how the state legislature could get any more extreme, but it's possible.
Strange times, indeed.
Wednesday, July 06, 2011
Laramie County Democrats stage a home-raising for Habitat for Humanity July 17
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| Jimmy Carter, well-known Democrat, works with locals on 2010 Minnesota building project |
Saturday, May 07, 2011
Register now for "Walk in My Shoes" fund-raiser for WY Coalition for the Homeless
Have you registered yet for the Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless fundraiser, Walk In My Shoes? It is only a little over a month away and now is the time to sign up as a walker, ghost walker or sponsor.
Go to http://www.wch.vcn.com/walkregis11.htm to register as a walker or ghost walker
Go to http://www.wch.vcn.com/sponsorregis.htm to register as a sponsor
This year the Walk is on Saturday June 11 -- registration starts at 8:00 a.m. and the walk goes at 9:00 a.m. Registration prior to the day of the walk is $15.00 on the day of the Walk it is $20.00
There will be food, fun, door prizes, music.
Thursday, May 05, 2011
Register now for Walk in My Shoes fund-raiser
Go to http://www.wch.vcn.com/walkregis11.htm to register as a walker or ghost walker
Go to http://www.wch.vcn.com/sponsorregis.htm to register as a sponsor
This year the Walk is on Saturday June 11 -- registration starts at 8:00 a.m. and the walk goes at 9:00 a.m. Registration prior to the day of the walk is $15.00 on the day of the Walk it is $20.00
There will be food, fun, door prizes, music.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Wyoming Winds tracks homeless issues
Other Wyoming Winds articles are taken from similar publications in the U.S. and internationally. Some of it hits close to home as more and more families in the U.S. lose jobs and homes.
Read the November edition of Wyoming Winds at http://www.wch.vcn.com/wwnov09.htm.
For the Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless home page go to http://www.wch.vcn.com. Take a look at the fund drive and contribute a few bucks.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Homelessness increases in rural West
In the July 12 Washington Post, Alexi Mostrous writes about the increase in U.S. homelessness, especially in rural and suburban areas.
Louis Gill doesn't like to turn anyone away. The director of the Bakersfield Homeless Center in California has taken to laying out cots and mattresses between the shelter's 174 registered beds to cope with the rush of homeless families brought to his doors by the financial crisis.
"Last year, we saw a 34 percent increase in homeless families and a 24 percent increase in homeless children," he said. "Why do we go beyond capacity? Because in a just society, a child should not have to sleep outside or in a car."
Gill is a frontline witness to the change in the makeup of the country's homeless. The stereotype of a homeless person as a single man no longer applies. A resident of the Bakersfield center is far more likely to be a young mother with a "good, solid job and a mortgage that she just couldn't pay."
"They're like folks you know and that you've worked with," Gill said. "Maybe the work's not there right now. Maybe they got behind on their payments. But the idea of a typical homeless person has changed. We're seeing individuals come in that have never had to access the safety net before."
A study by Housing and Urban Development (HUD) measured changes in the number of homeless between 2007 and 2008, before the height of the economic crisis, and Director Shaun Donovan acknowledged that the data do not reflect "the great many more families who were living on the edge, doubling up with friends and family members, and struggling to stay out of the shelters and off the streets."
Some case studies collected by the department's Homelessness Pulse Project suggest that rural and suburban areas were particularly ill-equipped to cope with the new wave of homeless. And many of the states that experienced the largest increases in homelessness are predominately rural.
In Mississippi, the number of homeless increased 42 percent last year; in Wyoming, 40 percent; in Montana and Missouri, 23 percent; and in Iowa, 22 percent.
It's good to know that Wyoming is right up there (or right down there) with Mississippi when it comes to homelessness. But these statistics are now a year old. What's happened around the rural West in the past year, when the walls really came crashing down?
The Welcome Mat Day Center in Cheyenne is the only one of its kind in the Capital City. Comea House at 1504 Stinson Ave. provides overnight shelter. Welcome Mat provides a variety of on-site services at its 907 Logan Avenue facility. The Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless publishes a newsletter, Wyoming Winds. Its web site has a list of homeless resources in Wyoming. Go to http://www.wch.vcn.com/wchsvcs.htm
What's my homeless risk? I have a good job and a house we call home. My wife works and likes what she does. Our teen is working this summer and so is our home-from-college son. If those jobs disappeared tomorrow, how long would it take for us to be homeless? My job includes the health ionsurance that covers us all. No job and no health insurance spells doom, especially when Chris has a pre-existing condition known as diabetes.
We're a resourceful family, but one that spends most of its income on mortgage, cars, groceries and ongoing bills. We were frugal during those boom times when our fellow Americans were spending freely on vacations and boats and eating out at Olive Garden. Retirement is compiling daily, but savings are not.
How close are we to homelessness? What about you?




