ReportWire

Tag: Eliot Church

  • The Five Minute Read

    [ad_1]

    Lowell Rotary serves

    Members of Lowell Rotary, along with loved ones, friends and colleagues from the Merrimack Valley Rotary, prepared and served well over 100 hot dinners at St. Paul’s Soup Kitchen at Eliot Church on Sept. 16. The dinner was sponsored in part by Rotary District 7910.

    Both the church’s Day Center and the soup kitchen at 273 Summer St. offer food outreach all year long, Monday through Friday, from the Eliot Fellowship Hall. The local rotary club was founded in 1920 and has been serving the Lowell area for 105 years. At the international level the Rotary, whose mission is “Service Above Self,” has 1.2 million members in virtually every country in the world and is known for its work to eradicate polio.

    For more information, email POTRotary@gmail.com.

    Poetry reading

    Enjoy an evening of poetry with Paul Marion, Antonina Palisano and Dan Murphy, Friday, Sept. 19, at 6:30 p.m., at Lala books, 189 Market St.

    Among his many works, Marion is the author of “Union River: Poems and Sketches and Lockdown Letters & Other Poems” and editor of the early writings of Jack Kerouac. For more information about this and the bookstore’s other events, call 978-221-5966 or visit lalabookstore.com.

    Billerica Community Farmers Market

    BILLERICA — The Billerica Community Farmers Market is open Mondays from 3 to 7 p.m. (or dusk), at 793 Boston Road, through Oct. 6. BCFM features farms, prepared foods, artisans and crafters, and entertainment. It was named the No. 1 Farmers Market in Massachusetts by America’s Farmers Market Celebration by American Farmland Trust in 2022, 2023 and 2024.

    The market provides members of the community a place to purchase fresh, local produce and goods directly from farmers and producers. It provides farmers and producers with a direct market for their produce and goods. It also supports local agriculture and producers, educates the community about eating healthfully and supports the importance of sustaining agriculture.

    For more information and the weekly lineup, visit billericacommunityfarmersmarket.org.

    Tewksbury to host voter registration session

    TEWKSBURY — A voter registration session has been scheduled for Friday, Sept. 26, at the Town Clerk’s Office inside Town Hall, 1009 Main St. Town Hall will be open that day from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. to accommodate anyone looking to register in person.

    In a statement, Town Clerk Denise Graffeo said this is the final day to be eligible to vote at the Oct. 7 Special Town Meeting for residents who are not registered to vote.

    People who are U.S. citizens, residents of Tewksbury and who will be at least 18 years old on or before Oct. 7 are eligible to register. Those meeting these qualifications who have a Massachusetts Driver’s License can submit their registration online at sec.state.ma.us/ovr. Mail-in voter registration forms may be obtained at the bit.ly/46K4VO0. Those registering by mail should have their form hand-canceled to ensure it is postmarked before the deadline.

    Residents may also register to vote during regular Town Clerk’s Office hours, Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Tuesday, 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

    For more information, call 978-640-4355, email townclerk@tewksbury-ma,gov or visit tewksbury-ma.gov/315/Town-Clerk.

    [ad_2]

    Staff Report

    Source link

  • Lowell’s adult homeless shelter at peak capacity

    Lowell’s adult homeless shelter at peak capacity

    [ad_1]

    LOWELL — There are more homeless people than available beds in Lowell, leading to people in need of emergency shelter being turned away, said Isaiah Stephens, managing director of the Lowell Transitional Living Center on Middlesex Street.

    “People are coming into the shelter faster than we can house them,” Stephens told a group of service providers and advocates attending a remote meeting of Solidarity Lowell on Jan. 28.

    Solidarity Lowell is a volunteer group of community members of Greater Lowell working toward social justice in areas such as housing and homelessness.

    In January, the city conducted its annual, federally mandated point-in-time count of the number of people experiencing homelessness, and found there are 189 sheltered and 97 unsheltered individuals in Lowell.

    At the City Council’s Feb. 6 meeting, councilors suggested that some people were unsheltered by choice and not due to a lack of shelter or motel beds.

    “We have open beds that people aren’t taking,” Councilor Erik Gitschier said.

    The bed-to-person ratio was just one of the many surprising data points to come out of the roundtable. Attendees heard about police agencies from as far away as Salisbury bringing unhoused people to Lowell’s shelter, that more men than women need shelter and an almost doubling in attendance at the Eliot Day Center, which provides both spiritual and practical support to its unhoused neighbors in the city.

    “This time last year, our average daily attendance was around 70 people,” the Rev. Heather Prince Doss said. “Now it’s around 125 people a day.”

    The number of unhoused people who call Lowell home jumped by a staggering 23% last year based on figures released by city Director of Homeless Initiatives Maura Fitzpatrick

    The outreach mission on Summer Street, across from South Common Park, opens its doors at 8 a.m. The program offers a safe place for people who are homeless to escape the weather and the streets, to grab breakfast and lunch, or as a stop in their day for a cup of coffee, companionship or solitude. St. Paul’s Soup Kitchen takes over at 2:30 p.m. until the evening, with dinner at 5 p.m. The Day Center is not open on the weekends.

    “The reality is that there isn’t enough space,” Doss said. “The shelter and the hotels tend to be at capacity every night.”

    LTLC is a client-centered emergency shelter that has provided shelter and care to adults for 35 years. It was founded as the Middlesex Shelter in 1986 in response to the number of homeless individuals living on the streets of Lowell, and is now the largest homeless shelter and support organization north of Boston with 90 beds and an extra 70 emergency beds in winter.

    Stephens said the shelter offers case-management and harm-reduction services, addiction counseling, HIV testing, health care and resident meals for the homeless population.

    “When I first started at LTLC about six years ago, we were a sober/dry shelter,” he said. “But for the past four years we’ve been operating as a wet shelter because sobriety shouldn’t be a barrier to housing someone.”

    That open-door mission is being strained by the crushing need for affordable and low-income housing in the city that Stephens said is causing people to “fall into homelessness.”

    “It really is a public health crisis,” he said.

    Even under the winter protocol program, which funds additional shelter and hotel beds from November through March, Stephens said the LTLC staff nightly turn away men looking to get off the streets and into a warm bed.

    “We cap out for the men every night,” Stephens said. “We haven’t hit max capacity with the women, yet.”

    The lack of available or affordable housing is a regionwide issue, but it is being felt most acutely in Lowell.

    Although many communities have unhoused people, not all communities provide services for that demographic. Instead, each town has an agreement with the South Middlesex Opportunity Council, the operator of the LTLC.

    “Police drop off people every night at the shelter from other communities,” Stephens said.

    At the same time, larger communities like Lawrence and Haverhill are also under-resourced to meet the demand and send their homeless to the LTLC.

    Lawrence’s Daybreak Shelter has about 20 beds for a city of almost 89,000. In Haverhill, with a population of 67,000, Mitch’s Place has enough beds for 30 people — even during winter protocol.

    “It’s frustrating because we don’t have enough beds for people in our own city, and now we’re helping other communities as well,” Stephens said.

    Daniel O’Connor is the chair of Lowell’s Hunger and Homeless Commission, and also a board president with House of Hope, a nonprofit that helps homeless families. He noted that sheltering capacity in Lowell’s surrounding towns is low.

    “We have over 200 beds compared to 26 beds in these other cities,” he said. “I don’t understand why the sheltering is so low in these cities.”

    Massachusetts has two distinct homeless systems: one for families and one for adults.

    “The emergency assistance family shelter system is at capacity for 7,500 families,” O’Connor said. “There are 600 families on the waiting list for shelter beds.”

    As both the adult and family homeless crisis rages on, Stephens said the need even exceeds the available manpower to staff the facility.

    “We do not have enough staff,” he said. “Staffing is a big, big problem in human service work. Our field is criminally underpaid and the job is very, very hard. People aren’t knocking down the door to work in the shelter.”

    He asked the public’s help in donations such as handwarmers, gloves, hats and socks.

    “Anything that will keep people warm,” Stephens said.

    [ad_2]

    Melanie Gilbert

    Source link