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Posts Tagged ‘supportive housing’

Photo: Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff.
Resident service coordinator Judith Lucien and senior property manager Ron Quimby stocked the shelves in the makeshift pantry at Mainstay Supportive Housing and Home Care in Chelsea on Dec. 11.

This is the story of generosity between a well-off group of retirees and one threatened with food insecurity. It’s also the story of how great both the giver and the receiver can feel.

Claire Thornton writes at the Boston Globe, “Husband and wife Ron Quimby and Krissy Fleming tell each other everything. Each manages a senior living community near Boston. …

North Hill Retirement Community in Needham, where Fleming works, sits on a 59-acre campus and advertises state-of-the-art amenities. Mainstay Supportive Housing and Home Care in Chelsea, Quimby’s employer, is a HUD Section 202 property that provides affordable housing for very low-income seniors who need supportive services.

“During the government shutdown in November, when Quimby was consumed with worry over the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program [food stamps] cuts his Chelsea residents faced, Fleming thought residents at North Hill would want to help. …

“For more than a month, Quimby brought weekly donations from North Hill’s 400 residents. … With SNAP payments stopped in November, the food was a lifeline for the low-income seniors with medical challenges and limited mobility who had no extra money to go shopping with, he said.

“Meanwhile, with a bit more income to spare, residents at North Hill embarked on grocery shopping missions for several weeks, pushing carts at Market Basket, Whole Foods, and Sudbury Farms in search of deals and specials they could send to Chelsea.

“Besides groceries, there was a tangible kindness linking the two groups of seniors, said Judy Lucien, a resident services coordinator, who has worked at the HUD-subsidized apartment complex in Chelsea for 17 years. …

“ ‘Krissy and her husband were really examples for those of us who had less information and were less aware of the need,’ said Geoff Pierson, 86, a retired school superintendent and North Hill resident. …

“About 20 miles away, Joe Downey, 69, has resided at Mainstay in Chelsea for the past two years after living unhoused for about three years in Brockton. After working in security for most of his career, Downey cared for his father, who suffered from a chronic disease, his blind aunt, and his mother, who died of a stroke. Later, Downey said he slept on someone’s couch for $1,000 a month and eventually ‘ran out of money.’ …

“Of Mainstay’s 66 residents, some have experienced homeless and as many as 80 percent receive SNAP benefits, said CEO Larry Oaks.

“And when suddenly that was in question, it was like, ‘Wow, these folks can’t live without that,’ said Oaks, who has worked at Mainstay for eight years.

“Mainstay resident Camilla Smith can’t cook without assistance, and relies on ready-to-eat items, Quimby said. Before coming to Mainstay 10 years ago, Smith said she bounced between halfway homes and worked jobs at Stop ‘N Shop and Friendly’s Ice Cream. …

“To meet the complex needs of Mainstay residents, North Hill residents filled a storage room ‘four times over, with donations, Fleming said. …

“Pierson, the former Lexington Public Schools superintendent, said he and his North Hill neighbors … had the financial resources to help the residents in Chelsea and wanted to support those affected by [the] cuts to safety net programs.

“ ‘I felt angry because of the behavior of the present administration to destroy things of value or of comfort,’ Pierson said. …

“Though the seniors at Mainstay have a roof over their heads, food insecurity has been and will continue to be a critical issue, Oaks said.

“ ‘If they don’t have their SNAP benefits, their incomes are not sufficient — they’re not going to feed themselves,’ Oaks, 57, said. While SNAP benefits were restored in mid-November, he said his residents continue to worry about benefit cuts going forward.”

More at the Globe, here.

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An example of tiny houses designed to combat homelessness.

It’s been a while since I’ve written about tiny houses (you can search on the term to see what I posted before), and I was curious to see what was going on in the movement. To my surprise, I learned that a tiny-house community is being planned to combat homelessness in Worcester.

Tori Bedford writes at GBH News, “Plans for a community of tiny homes for people experiencing chronic homelessness in Worcester have been announced, with a small village slated to open in 2023.

“The village, to be located at 264 Stafford St., will have 21 tiny homes that contain a bedroom, bathroom and combination kitchen and living room, contained within about 480 square feet. As of 2019, 84 people in Worcester were chronically homeless, according to data reported to Central Mass Housing.

” ‘It’s expanding the options for people,’ said Amy Arrell, a service director at Open Sky Community Services, ‘because different things work for different people, depending on their trauma history, their need for privacy, their different experiences when they’ve been out on the streets.’

“Arrell says Worcester’s homelessness crisis has heightened during the coronavirus pandemic: at the height of the crisis in April of last year, nearly half of the population at a Worcester adult emergency homeless shelter tested positive for COVID-19.

“Open Sky is working in partnership with the Worcester East Side Community Development Corporation and a group of local real estate developers, organizations and agencies to offer permanent housing for people who have struggled with chronic homelessness, mental health challenges and substance use.

“Applicants for residency will be processed through a coordinated entry process, led by the city, Open Sky and the Department of Mental Health, to select candidates who don’t thrive in a group setting or temporary housing. …

“The village will include on-site housing specialists to help transition tenants into the neighborhood, as well as individualized and group mental health and substance use treatment. Staff will live in a central building that also serves as a community center, offering monthly social activities like barbecues and picnics. Residents will additionally have access to both individual and community gardens.

“Subsidies will be available to cover the cost of rent based on a percentage of income, and resources for job placement will be made available to residents on-site. …

“ ‘In permanent supportive housing programs, people usually don’t live there forever, they live there for as long as they need to. But there is a sense of security as you’re recovering to know that if you do need that, it’s a permanent option for you.’ …

“Some funding has already been secured through UMass Memorial Health’s anchor mission program, which has connected Worcester East Side CDC and Civico, a real estate development firm that has designed the model based on similar projects across the Pacific Northwest.

“ ‘We abide by some of the principles referred to as “trauma-informed design,” ‘ Taylor Bearden, a partner at Civico, said. ‘The idea is that you’re actually designing for the population and the experiences that these people who may have suffered from chronic homelessness have had in their life. You’re not creating dark corners. You’re making sure that, from the bedroom, you have a clear line of sight to the front door. Certain things that may be triggers for trauma are sort of addressed in the architecture of the spaces themselves.’

“Bearden says safety and community are huge factors in designing a space that can serve as both a recovery center and a liveable space for people who have experienced trauma.

“ ‘The goal is to create a really permanent community where the people who live there develop relationships.’ “

More at GBH radio, here. At the Christian Science Monitor, here, you can see what some other cities are doing to address homelessness.

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