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Tag: homeless shelter

  • This new homeless navigation center’s unique tiered approach is geared toward reaching self-sufficiency

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    Some might say the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus that opened recently in a former 255-room hotel is undergirded by one of humanity’s seven deadly sins — envy.

    The intent is to turn that feeling into a motivational force. For his part, Mayor Mike Coffman prefers to refer to the three-tiered residential system at the homeless navigation center as an “incentive-based program” — one that awards increasingly comfortable living quarters to those showing progress on their journey to self-sufficiency.

    “The notion here is (that) different standards of living act as an incentive,” Coffman said in early November during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the campus, which occupies a former Crowne Plaza Hotel at East 40th Avenue and Chambers Road. “The idea is to move up the tiers into much better living situations.”

    Clients in the new facility, which opened its doors on Nov. 17, start at the bottom with a cot and a locker. They can eventually migrate to a hotel room, with a locking door and a private bathroom.

    But that upgrade comes with a price.

    “To get a room here, you have to be working full time,” Coffman said.

    It’s an approach that the mayor says threads the needle between housing-first and work-first, the two prevailing strategies for addressing homelessness today. The housing-first approach emphasizes getting someone into a stable home before requiring employment, sobriety or treatment. A work-first setup conditions housing on a person finding work and seeking help with underlying mental health and addiction problems.

    “We’re providing a continuum of services that starts with an emergency shelter,” said Jim Goebelbecker, the executive director of Advance Pathways.

    Advance Pathways, the nonprofit group that ran the Aurora Resource Day Center before its recent closure, was chosen through a competitive bidding process to operate the new navigation campus in Aurora — with $2 million in annual help from the city. Goebelbecker said the tiered approach at the new facility “taps into a person’s motivation for change.”

    The Aurora Regional Navigation Campus’ debut nearly completes a mission that has been in the works for more than three years. It is the fourth — and penultimate — metro Denver homeless navigation center to go online since the Colorado General Assembly passed House Bill 1378 in 2022.

    The bill allocated American Rescue Plan Act dollars to stand up one central homeless navigation center. The plan has since shifted to five smaller centers, with locations in Aurora, Lakewood, Boulder, Denver and Englewood. The Colorado Department of Local Affairs in late 2023 approved $52 million for the centers. The final center, the Jefferson County Regional Navigation Campus in Lakewood, is undergoing renovations and will open next year.

    Aurora’s center, with 640 beds across its three tiered spaces, is by far the largest of the five facilities.

    Cathy Alderman, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, said the opening of Aurora’s navigation campus is “a really big deal.” Aside from serving its own clientele, she expects the center to send referrals to the coalition’s newly opened Sage Ridge Supportive Residential Community near Watkins, where people without stable housing go to address their substance-use disorders.

    According to the Metro Denver Homeless Initiative’s one-night count in late January, Aurora had 626 residents without a home — down from 697 in 2024 but up sharply from 427 five years ago.

    “A person can go to one place and get multiple needs met,” Alderman said, referring to the array of job, medical and addiction treatment services that give homeless navigation centers their name. “We are excited that the new campus is now up and running.”

    The new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus, operated by Advance Pathways, photographed in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    ‘How do I move up?’

    Walking into the Aurora Regional Navigation Campus feels like walking into, well, a hotel.

    The swimming pool was removed during renovation, as was a water fountain in the lobby. Everything else stayed, including beds, bedding, furniture — even a stash of bottled cocktail delights. But not the alcohol to go with it.

    “They left everything, down to the forks and knives and a wall of maraschino cherries,” said Jessica Prosser, Aurora’s director of housing and community services, as she walked through the hotel’s industrial kitchen.

    The kitchen, which was part of the $26.5 million sale of the Crowne Plaza Hotel to Aurora last year, was a godsend to an operation tasked with serving three meals a day to hundreds of people. The city spent another $13.5 million to renovate the building.

    “To build a new commercial kitchen is a half-million dollars, easy,” Prosser said.

    The layout of the navigation center was deliberate, she said. The hotel’s convention center space is now occupied by Tier I and Tier II housing. The first tier is made up of nearly 300 cots, divided by sex. There are lockers for personal belongings and shared bathrooms. Anyone is welcome.

    On the other side of a nondescript wall is Tier II, which is composed of a grid of 114 compartmentalized, open-air cubicles with proper beds and lockable storage. The center assigns residents in this tier case managers to help them treat personal challenges and get on the path toward landing a job.

    Tier 2 Courage space, an overnight accommodation for people who are working on recovery, employment and housing pathways at the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
    The Tier II “Courage” space, which offers overnight accommodation for people who are working on recovery, employment and housing pathways at the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus in Aurora, on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    Tier III residents live in the 255 hotel rooms. They must have a full-time job and are required to pay a third of their income to the program. Residents in this tier will typically remain at Advance Pathways for up to two years before they have the skills and stability to find housing on the outside, Goebelbecker said.

    People living in the congregate tiers can house their dogs in a pet room, which can accommodate 40 canines. (No cats, gerbils or fish). The center also doesn’t accept children. Around 60 staff members, plus 10 contracted security personnel, will work at the facility 24/7.

    Shining a bright light on the path forward and upward inside the facility — the windows of some of the coveted private rooms are fully visible from the lobby — is an “intentional design feature,” Prosser said.

    “How do I move up?” she mused, stepping into the shoes of a resident eyeing the facility’s layout. “How do I get in there?”

    The Tier 3 Commitment space, private rooms which will serve people who are in the workforce that are building towards independence, seen at the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus in Aurora on Thursday, November 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
    The Tier III “Commitment” space, which provides private rooms that will serve people who are in the workforce and are building towards financial independence, seen at the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    It’s a system that demands something of the people using it, Coffman said, while at the same time providing the guidance and help that clients will need.

    “This is not just maintaining people where they are — this is about moving people forward,” the mayor said.

    The approach is familiar to Shantell Anderson, Advance Pathways’ program director. She told her life story during the ribbon-cutting ceremony, bringing tears to the eyes of some in the audience.

    A native of Denver’s Park Hill neighborhood, Anderson fell in with the wrong crowd. She became pregnant at 15 and got hooked on cocaine. She spiraled into a life on the streets that resulted in her children being sent to an aunt for caretaking.

    But through treatment and by intersecting with the right people, she recovered. She earned a nursing degree and worked at RecoveryWorks, a nonprofit organization that operated a day shelter in Lakewood, before taking the job at Advance Pathways.

    The Tier 1 Compassion emergency shelter for immediate short-term shelter for those in need at the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
    The Tier I “Compassion” emergency shelter, which provides immediate short-term shelter for those in need at the new Aurora Regional Navigation Campus in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    “This is a system that honors people’s dignity,” Anderson said, her voice heavy with emotion.

    In an interview, she said assuming the burden to improve her situation was critical to her transformation.

    “I actually did that — no one gave me anything,” said Anderson, 48. “If it was handed to me, I didn’t appreciate it.”

    How much responsibility to place on the people being helped by such programs is still a matter of intense debate by policymakers and advocates for homeless people. The housing-first approach favored by Denver and many big cities across the country is anchored in the idea that work or treatment requirements will result in many people falling through the cracks and staying outside, particularly those who face mental-health challenges.

    The Bridge House in Englewood, one of the five metro area navigation centers, follows a “Ready to Work” model that is similar to that of the upper tiers of the Aurora Regional Navigation Campus.

    Opened in May, the Bridge House has 69 beds. CEO Melissa Arguello-Green said the organization asks its clients (called trainees) to put skin in the game by landing a job with Bridge House’s help and then contributing a third of their paycheck as rent.

    “We help them find employment through our agency so they can leave our agency,” she said. “We’re looking for self-sufficiency that will get people off system support.”

    Arguello-Green said she would like to see more coordination between the metro’s five navigation centers, though she acknowledged it’s still in the early going.

    “We’re missing that come-to-the-table collaboration,” she said.

    Volunteer outreach coordinator for Advance Pathways, Evan Brown, oraganizes the clothing bank before the Aurora Regional Navigation Campus grand opening ceremony in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
    Advance Pathways volunteer outreach coordinator Evan Brown organizes the clothing bank before the Aurora Regional Navigation Campus’ grand opening ceremony in Aurora on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    Homeless numbers still rising

    Shannon Gray, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Local Affairs, said her department had started convening quarterly in-person meetings across the locations.

    “While each navigation campus is unique and reflects community-specific strategies, they are all a part of a regional effort to bring external partners together onsite to provide needed services and referrals,” Gray said. Together, they are “building towards a larger regional system to connect homeless households to a larger network of opportunities.”

    The centers are permitted to “tailor their approach to their unique needs and vision,” she said. While Englewood and Aurora use a tiered system, Gray said, the other three centers don’t.

    “It is important to understand that DOLA serves as a funder for these regional navigation campuses — we do not oversee their operation or maintenance,” she said.

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  • Denver homeless shelter to close in January 2026, be rebuilt as affordable housing

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    DENVER — A Denver shelter that serves people experiencing homelessness is set to close and be rebuilt as affordable housing, leaving current residents worried about where they will go.

    The Park Avenue Inn shelter initially opened as part of the City of Denver’s COVID-19 homelessness emergency response, with the goal of putting affordable housing on the property eventually. Since then, it’s come to serve dozens as a non-congregate shelter and unofficial transitional housing.

    “It’s served as a pathway to people to get other housing options,” said Cathy Alderman, chief communications and public policy officer for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, which owns the property. “Sometimes that takes a little longer because we’re in a really high-cost housing market here in Denver, and there’s not a lot of housing resources to move people into.”

    Denver7 reporter Danielle Kreutter spent some time Monday afternoon listening to residents at Park Ave Inn.

    “We were both homeless together for a few years now,” Aaron Dawson said about him and his wife, Michelle Pasco.

    A few months ago, they were told the shelter would be closing in January 2026. It’s set to be demolished to make way for an affordable housing project.

    “It’s like dire straits around here right now,” Dawson said.

    “We’re just hoping to get housed,” Pasco added.

    Denver7

    Pictured: Denver7’s Danielle Kreutter speaking with Aaron Dawson and his wife, Michelle Pasco

    Of the 36 residents currently staying at Park Avenue Inn, six have found other housing. Several others have been referred to Renewal Village, another property owned by Colorado Coalition for the Homeless. The single-occupancy studio apartments are in what used to be a hotel near West 48th Avenue and Bannock Street in Denver.

    “There’s like 25 people still here that don’t know what they’re doing,” Dawson said. “Some of them never got offered Renewal Village, even.”

    CCH acknowledged that some Park Avenue Inn residents may not have been offered housing at Renewal Village due to new tenant eligibility requirements.

    “Renewal Village has certain referral pathways that we are obligated to, in terms of accepting people from certain programs or who’ve gone through certain assessments,” Alderman explained. “We will move some people from Park Avenue Inn into Renewal Village, but not everybody. But we will work with everybody at Park Avenue Inn to make sure that they have a safe place to exit to.”

    CCH said it is optimistic that it will be able to place the rest of the residents into housing before the shelter closes.

    “I think we have more time than we’ve seen with some shutdowns of spaces before,” Alderman said.

    Cathy Alderman

    Denver7

    Pictured: Denver7’s Danielle Kreutter speaking with Cathy Alderman, chief communications and public policy officer for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless

    Park Avenue Inn is set to close in January 2026, around when the City of Denver plans to close a large homeless shelter and a tiny home community.

    Alderman called the timing an unfortunate coincidence, as the plan was to always transform the property into affordable housing.

    “I think we’re always concerned when we lose resources in the homelessness response system because we know that we have a growing population of people experiencing homelessness, and we need more, not less, resources,” Alderman said. “But I think from our perspective, we also need more housing, and so this is really a critical step for us to provide that lasting solution.”

    CCH has stopped referring people to Park Avenue Inn in order to minimize the impact of the closure.

    The building will be demolished in January or February 2026.

    “We’ll be breaking ground sometime next year on our first 60 units of affordable housing,” Alderman explained. “Some of those units will be supportive housing, and then probably a year or two after that, we’ll be able to break ground on our second phase, which could bring up to 160 potential new units of housing to the city of Denver, which is so needed and is the long-term solution to homelessness.”

    Residents told Denver7 they hope their neighbors find a safe place to land.

    “You don’t just pop this on them real quick and say, ‘Oh by the way, you have 120 days to figure out your whole entire rest of your life,’” said Dawson.


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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Danielle Kreutter

    Denver7’s Danielle Kreutter covers stories that have an impact in all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in reporting on affordable housing and issues surrounding the unhoused community. If you’d like to get in touch with Danielle, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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  • St. John’s Ministries wants to expand capacity, remove seasonal restrictions at women’s shelter

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    St. John’s Ministries wants to expand capacity and remove seasonal restrictions of its emergency homeless shelter for women at 700 E. Walnut St. in Green Bay by requesting two changes to the shelter’s conditional use permit.

    The proposed amendments would strike out wording that currently restricts the emergency shelter’s operations to between Nov. 1 and April 30, as well as let the nonprofit shelter 70 women a night, or 12 more than its current maximum capacity of 58, according to a letter signed by the nonprofit’s executive director Jesse Brunette. No additional bunk beds would be added, the letter noted; in the event that more than 58 women needed shelter, mats would be put on the floor.

    “This would provide the flexibility needed to respond to the growing need for shelter in our community and, if appropriate in the future, operate year-round,” Brunette wrote. The letter later continued that, “Increasing the permitted capacity will ensure we can continue to meet the needs of women experiecing homelessness without turning anyone away.”

    The ask ― if approved by the City Council ― would mark an operational shift in one of the city’s most prominent homeless shelter organizations as the number of Brown County residents without a home continues to climb. Since opening in 2005, St. John’s shelters have operated, in some capacity, as places of last resort with low barriers to entry during the colder months of the year.

    St. John’s Ministries Women’s Shelter nearly reached its 58-person capacity during its most recent shelter season, Brunette said. The shelter housed over 50 women on 16 nights, and one night, was one person away from hitting its maximum capacity, Brunette said. At the June 16 Protection and Policy Committee meeting, he attributed the rise in homelessness to the rising cost of housing, which has been the area’s biggest need for years. About a quarter of those who come to St. John’s Ministries have full-time jobs, Brunette said. “They just can’t afford the housing costs, which have surged,” he said

    “This request is really borne out of necessity.” Brunette said.

    St. John’s Ministries Women’s Shelter and Wellspring at 700 E. Walnut St.

    The nonprofit’s request was long expected, with Brunette telling the committee in June that St. John’s Ministries would submit a revision to its conditional use permit “some time this summer to prepare for what could be maybe a dozen more women, if needed.”

    He had not been at liberty to elaborate on the nonprofit’s plans “to maybe provide additional options for people” in 2026, though indicated that St. John’s Ministries was in “a stage of strategic planning.”

    “I would certainly not want to rush or engage into a process that we’re not ready to adhere to,” Brunette told committee members when asked if St. John’s had ever considered a year-round sheltering program, “but I think we’ve recognized that we need to shift within our community to at least pilot something next year.” He said St. John’s Ministries has a “safe sleep” program that provides shelter to individuals identified as the most vulnerable community members during the nonprofit’s off-season.

    Brunette told the committee that given the increased homelessness population, the nonprofit’s request would prevent a moral dilemma if a 59th woman needed shelter.

    “Even though I would guess you would want us to be in compliance with city government, you understand turning away woman 59 on a 10-degree night could be deadly, and we would never want to morally be placed in that position,” Brunette told the committee.

    The proposed request also follows recent philosophical changes to the nonprofit’s daytime services. The nonprofit historically wanted those who entered its Wellspring and Micah Center daytime locations to be productive; things like sleeping or soda were prohibited. The policy became ill-suited and out-of-touch with the growing need for homelessness services, Brunette told committee members.

    City staff sent out notice of the anticipated revisions to neighboring residents on Aug. 25, said Stephanie Hummel, a city planner. St. John’s Ministries sent its own letter to those living within 250 feet of the shelter on Aug. 26, according to Tony Schneider, the nonprofit’s director of community engagement.

    They said feedback from residents and city staff has been overwhelmingly positive, and expect the request to pass the Plan Commission’s Sept. 8 meeting before landing on the City Council’s Sept. 16 agenda for final approval.

    Jesse Lin is a reporter covering the community of Green Bay and its surroundings, as well as politics in northeastern Wisconsin. Contact him at 920-834-4250 or jlin@gannett.com.

    This article originally appeared on Green Bay Press-Gazette: St. John’s Ministries wants to extend capacity at women’s shelter

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  • Orlando pauses new homeless shelter initiative hours after proposing the idea

    Orlando pauses new homeless shelter initiative hours after proposing the idea

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    Orlando city officials indefinitely paused a plan Tuesday night to invest $7.5 million in a new homeless shelter, a spokesperson for the city confirmed, just hours after initially announcing the idea.

    “After speaking with several community members, Mayor Dyer decided to remove the item from the agenda,” Andrea Otero, public information officer for the city, told Orlando Weekly over email. “We plan to continue gathering feedback from residents and determining the best ways to address the homelessness crisis.”

    According to reporting from Spectrum News 13, an initial meeting Tuesday night to discuss the initiative was met with a wave of negative feedback from residents of the area where the proposed open-access shelter would have been established. The city announced earlier that day that they had narrowed down a location they felt was fitting for what they had in mind: a 21,000-square-foot facility at 2140 W. Washington St., just a couple of miles west of downtown in District 5.

    Neighborhood residents, however, reportedly pleaded for the city to consider investing in a shelter location somewhere else, due to what they see as an over-concentration of homeless services and programs already established in their area.

    “Why is it that some of these entities can go in other neighborhoods and mess their neighborhoods up? How would you feel if you come home, and somebody got your water hose on and drinking out of it, or taking a shower?” asked resident Tracy Anderson.

    Shan Rose, the newly elected interim commissioner for District 5, acknowledged residents’ frustration. “These are mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters who are often homeless and that’s the reason why we have to come together,” said Rose. “District 5 unfortunately has the bigger burden of social services and so residents are saying no more here and that’s what we heard tonight.”

    Martha Are, head of the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida nonprofit who attended the meeting Tuesday night, conceded that residents had “legitimate concerns” and stressed that new shelters are needed across the tri-county region, not just in District 5.

    “Every county needs additional [shelter] capacity, and simultaneously, we have to create more housing opportunities for our citizens,” Are told Orlando Weekly, adding that homelessness has become a growing problem along major corridors. 

    “When we have more people becoming homeless, but we don’t increase our shelter capacity — the shelters are full,” Are stressed. “There’s no place for people to go, and therefore they’re out there, unsheltered. They’re out on the streets, and that dynamic is going to continue unless we add some shelter bed capacity.”

    A point-in-time homelessness count in Central Florida — covering Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties — conducted by Are’s nonprofit and volunteers earlier this year identified a 105 percent increase in the number of people in the region who are unsheltered, and are left to find shelter on the streets and sidewalks or in the woods. An estimated 1.3 million low-income families in Florida are severely cost-burdened, meaning at least 50 percent of their household’s monthly income is going toward rent and utilities.

    Existing shelters in the Orlando region are full, said Are. “Most of the existing shelters have been around for more than 25 years. We haven’t seen new shelters since then.”

    Orlando’s decade-long struggle navigating the issue of homelessness was exacerbated during the pandemic, as local rents skyrocketed, the housing market tightened, and the region saw an influx of residents who could afford housing that longtime locals had been priced out of. “It’s our neighbors, it’s our mothers, it’s our grandmothers” who are on the streets, said Are. “You know? It’s children, brothers.”

    The city of Orlando’s proposed $7.5 million investment in a new shelter — placed on pause this week — would come from the city’s Accelerate Orlando fund, a pool of federal funding the city received from the Biden administration’s American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. The city earmarked $58 million in funds total for Accelerate Orlando, a plan created specifically to address the city’s affordable housing crisis.

    Millions of dollars from that fund have already been approved for projects like a hotel conversion off Colonial Drive, mixed-income affordable housing development, investments in local homeless service organizations (including the HSN) and financial assistance for low-income residents to help cover housing repairs or down payment costs.

    The idea of this new proposal was to establish what’s known as an “open access” shelter: a shelter that would be operational 24/7, with a low bar to entry, offering basic helpful services like employment assistance, healthcare and counseling to help people find feasible housing options.

    Local housing advocates, including Are, stress that not only are local individuals and families struggling with a lack of housing, but also access to viable job opportunities, affordable childcare, and treatment for mental health and substance use problems that can be exacerbated by the experience of homelessness.

    “The best operated shelters for communities that they are in are the ones that are open 24/7, where you have staff who are working with people during the day to help them with their employment options, to help them access the healthcare services, mental health services that they need,” said Are. Those programs “can get better outcomes” she explained, “and they are less disruptive to a community because you don’t have people walking around.”

    She also acknowledged that some people who are homeless aren’t always willing to go to a shelter due to a bad prior experience with a shelter, or because existing shelters aren’t accommodating for people with pets, for unmarried couples, or for people who lost or had their valid forms of identification stolen.

    “There’s a lot about how a shelter gets structured that can make a difference in how effective it is for populations that have pretty valid reasons for not going into other facilities,” Are said.

    The problem extends beyond the Orlando metro area. The Sunshine State at large has become increasingly unaffordable, particularly for those who are low-income or who live on a fixed income from disability or Social Security payments.

    Even more, the state’s most politically influential industry lobbying groups have in recent years successfully pushed state legislators to gut local tenants’ rights laws, legalize scammy security deposit alternatives, ban rent control and ease building regulations that serve to benefit their members, while running the risk of throwing average Floridians under the bus.

    A new Florida law, approved by the GOP-controlled state Legislature and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis this year, could even further strain existing resources in communities. The law, originally pitched by an out-of-state think tank called the Cicero Institute, bans cities and counties from letting homeless people camp on public property and, effective Jan. 1, will allow individuals and businesses to sue a local government that fails to enforce the ban (while allowing a five-day period to cure).

    “They’re now forcing us to do something about it, but they’re not giving us the funding,” Orange County commissioner Emily Bonilla said of the state, during a county meeting earlier this summer in June.

    Other local leaders have tried to remain optimistic. “I feel pretty confident that we’re not in the business of incarcerating people for being poor, for being homeless or housing insecure,” said fellow county commissioner Mike Scott, during a legislative briefing on the bill in March. “I think even, notwithstanding this bill, I think we can meet the challenges to be able to serve those who are struggling with homelessness.”

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • Louisiana high school student who lived in homeless shelter graduates as valedictorian

    Louisiana high school student who lived in homeless shelter graduates as valedictorian

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    NEW ORLEANS — A Louisiana student has beaten the odds and graduated high school at the top of his class while living in a homeless shelter.

    Elijah Hogan, 19, started his high school career dealing with remote classes at the height of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. He recently wrapped up his senior year at Walter L. Cohen High School while living in Covenant House, a homeless shelter serving youth under 22 in New Orleans.

    “It’s been tough and rough, had a few trips and falls down, [but] I’m alright,” Hogan told “Good Morning America” of his final year in high school.

    Despite the challenges Hogan has had to face, he has found a strong community at Walter L. Cohen High School and at Covenant House, which he credits for helping him succeed.

    Without your education, you will not be able to get through the hardships and meet the people that helped you along the way

    Elijah Hogan, high school valedictorian

    “I have people that were there to help me get through it. And without them I wouldn’t have been where I’m at now as a valedictorian,” Hogan said of fellow students, teachers and staff, whom he said he leaned on for support.

    With a final GPA of 3.93, Hogan is one of two valedictorians in the class of 2024 at Cohen, a charter high school in New Orleans’ Uptown neighborhood.

    Hogan delivered a valedictorian address at the Walter L. Cohen High School graduation ceremony on May 24, a speech he described as a “thank-you note” to the community he said has given him so much.

    “The speech in itself was more of a thank-you letter to the school, to the staff, to the students and to their parents for helping us to get past our school years and get us where we are now graduating, going off in the world,” Hogan explained.

    It’s a departure from four years ago, as Hogan told “GMA,” when he started high school full of nervousness.

    “As time went on, I started to build up relationships, had to meet some wonderful people, got to know a lot of people, as well as forming relationships and trust with them,” he said.

    Among the many people who have seen and helped Hogan succeed are Jana DeCoster, director of student activities at Cohen High School, and Jarkayla Cobb, Hogan’s Rites of Passage case worker at Covenant House.

    “All of our students experience different levels of trauma, different experiences, and I think Elijah recognizes, like, yes, he had adults in his corner, but all of our students who made it to graduation also had adults in their corner,” DeCoster said. “And it is rare that they get thanked at graduation on such a large stage … the fact that he is so gracious to think of, again, not just himself, he’s thinking of all of his classmates, that’s just really special.”

    SEE ALSO | High school valedictorian delivers moving speech following father’s funeral

    Cobb said she has also noticed a significant change in Hogan since she first met him in 2023.

    “Being in a homeless shelter is traumatic. Whatever you went through to get you here is traumatic,” Cobb said.

    But with Hogan, Cobb explained that he has come a long way.

    “He was very shy. He had very little words at first, so it’s just awesome to see how much he’s developed and become so well-spoken over the last seven or eight months that I’ve been a part of his life and just been able to push and encourage him to go after everything that the world has to offer,” Cobb said.

    Now, the 19-year-old, a Marvel and Stan Lee fan who loves to read nonfiction and make art, said he is ready to take on a new adventure as he gets ready for college in the fall at Xavier University of Louisiana, where he hopes to major in graphic design.

    For other students looking to follow in his footsteps, Hogan recommended they take the time to focus on schoolwork.

    “There is a time and place where you can have fun, but try to keep yourself organized on some of your education as well, because without your education, you will not be able to get through the hardships and meet the people that helped you along the way,” Hogan said.

    Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures.

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  • Double homicide at Denver homeless shelter under investigation

    Double homicide at Denver homeless shelter under investigation

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    No arrests have been made in a double homicide at a Denver homeless shelter and Denver police are asking for the public to help in the investigation.

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    Bruce Finley

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  • Denver opening severe weather shelter Tuesday night

    Denver opening severe weather shelter Tuesday night

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    Denver city officials will open a severe weather shelter Tuesday night as temperatures are forecast to drop below 20 degrees.

    The McNichols Civic Center Building at 144 W. Colfax Ave. will be open from 6 p.m. Tuesday to 9 a.m. Wednesday for walk-up service, the city said in a news release Monday.

    People can also access shelter through the city’s other access points, including:

    • For individual men at the Lawrence Street Community Center, 2222 Lawrence St.;
    • For individual women at Samaritan House, 2301 Lawrence St.;
    • For youth ages 15-20 at Urban Peak, 2100 Stout St.

    Families in need of shelter should call the Connection Center at 303-295-3366.

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    Katie Langford

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  • For Homeless People, Care Homes Offer a Safe Place to Die With Dignity

    For Homeless People, Care Homes Offer a Safe Place to Die With Dignity

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    Jan. 10, 2023 — Tashi Taliaferro doesn’t want anyone to die alone. 

    Having worked for more than 30 years as a nurse — 12 of them as a hospice nurse — Taliaferro has always felt comfortable around the sick and dying. 

    What bothered her was the number of her patients who died without the comfort of family or friends.

    “We see people who are in their 80s or 90s with no family. We see veterans and the homeless and the underserved who are forgotten,” says Taliaferro, the assistant director of nursing at Advanced Nursing + Home Support, a home health care company in Rockville, MD. “We’ve been there with people who have had no one, and it just goes straight to my heart.” 

    Taliaferro is in the process of opening a residential home for homeless and chronically underserved people in her community of Montgomery County, MD, outside of Washington, D.C., which has one of the highest rates of residents living in poverty in the country. Each night, more than 4,410 people in the nation’s capital experience homelessness

    “No one should die alone unless by choice,” Taliaferro says. “I think anyone, no matter how old or young or rich or poor or whatever their background, deserves the utmost integrity, grace, compassion, and love.”

    The Growing Need for End-of-Life Home

    As the baby boom generation ages, the number of familial caregivers will become insufficient to the task of providing that care. The AARP Policy Institute estimates that by 2030, four potential family caregivers will be available for every one person over the age of 80. That’s compared to a ratio of 7 to 1 in 2010. By 2050, those numbers will fall to 3 to 1.

    Of course, the population of people without homes also is aging. A 2019 report from the University of Pennsylvania projects that the number of people 65 and older experiencing homelessness in the United States will nearly triple over the next 7 years, from 40,000 in 2017 to 106,000 by 2030.

    Homeless Americans age prematurely, the result of the chronic stress associated with living in shelters, on the streets, and couch surfing. The phenomenon is known as “weathering,” an area of particular interest for Rebecca Brown, MD, MPH, a geriatrician and assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

    Brown’s work has found that people 50 and older experiencing homelessness have similar or higher rates of geriatric conditions, cognitive impairment, urinary incontinence, frailty, and difficulty doing basic daily activities like bathing and dressing, than people in the general population with an average age of 80.

    “They get these aging-related conditions when they’re younger, and then not surprisingly, they also die earlier,” Brown says. 

    Many who have a terminal illness like cancer will continue to care for themselves in homeless shelters as long as they can, according to Travis Baggett, MD, director of research at the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program. 

    “But once they can no longer get out of bed on their own or bathe themselves or need oxygen, which most shelters don’t allow, they can no longer stay there,” Baggett says.

    These people may end up cycling between hospitals or nursing homes, where they receive medical care until they die. 

    Taliaferro has been working with Emily Cavey, a professional photographer and end-of-life doula. Like a birth doula, Cavey provides psychological, emotional, and physical support to dying people and their families. The pair bonded after Taliaferro coordinated care for Cavey’s dying loved one through her job, finding that they shared a similar desire to help people in the final stages of their lives. 

    Taliaferro told Cavey about her idea of a residential home to empower underserved and formerly homeless people to die with dignity, and they eventually launched the Good Hearts Foundation, a nonprofit organization, to raise money for their venture. 

    They are still in the early stages of finding a potential donor for a suitable house for the operation, as well as other sources of funds like grants to set up and run the home.

    For now, how the home will be licensed or permitted is unclear.  Taliaferro and Cavey are also working out what kind of license they’ll need to operate as a residential home; county officials in Maryland at first thought the pair would need a hospice provider license. But the home itself won’t offer medical services. Residents will be able to have outside health care providers come in to deliver services, but there will be no financial ties between the residential facility and those companies. 

    They already have a name for the first home: Maddie’s House, after Taliaferro’s mother, who died in a car accident when Taliaferro was 2 years old. They hope to open in 2023.  

    The Grace House: A Model Care Home forHomeless People

    Taliaferro got her spark for Maddie’s House after learning about the Omega Home Network, a membership of 40 residential homes and others in development that all serve the same purpose of providing  a loving environment for people who would otherwise live alone in their last days. 

    The Grace House, a care home in Akron, OH,  and part of the network, opened in September 2022 for terminally ill people. 

    Funded by grants and donations, the facility has three requirements for residents: They must be enrolled in a hospice program through Medicare, Medicaid, or a private insurer; they must have limited financial resources; and they can’t have someone who could otherwise house and care for them. All services are free to residents. 

    Holly Klein, a registered nurse and the founder of Grace House, routinely cared for homeless patients during her 14 years as an in-home hospice nurse in Akron. 

    “I use the term ‘home’ loosely because it was really wherever the patient lived,” she says. “I met people under a bridge, in motel rooms, in homeless shelters, and some just in living conditions that were not dignified. Seeing people die alone in those conditions was a burden, and I started asking the question of, ‘Isn’t there more that we should be doing?’” 

    Hospice providers – who do not have financial ties to Grace House –  make regular visits to individual residents just as they would if residents had their own private homes, to manage clinical care, while the home’s staff assist residents 24/7 with cooking, cleaning, personal care, and administering medication.

    “We think of ourselves as the surrogate family,” Klein adds. “And anything that a hospice program can teach a family to do in their home, they can teach our staff to do, such as simple dressing changes and medication education.”

    Since opening, 16 residents with terminal illnesses like heart disease and kidney disease have come to Grace House to live and die within its walls. 

    Five residents experienced homelessness before arriving, and several came from homes “that were literally falling in on them or didn’t have running water, electricity, or heat,” Klein says.

    Residents of Grace House who lived on their own for years may enter the facility withdrawn and wary. But many forge friendships with each other, staff, and volunteers – and even reconnect with estranged loved ones in the final days and weeks of their lives. 

    “We provide the environment where they feel safe and secure, which enables them to let down some of those walls and old habits to reconnect with people,” Klein says. “It’s been amazing to see.”

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