Culver Rotary Donates Time, Money To Help Homeless

 

November 6, 2014

Since 1991 Upward Bound House in Culver City has helped more than 900 families and 1,692 children navigate the daunting road beyond homelessness through transitional supportive housing.

Via a $2,500 District Community Grant, the Culver City Rotary Community Foundation in partnership with Rotary District 5280, has adopted and outfitted two of the 18 apartments at the temporary family shelter where homeless families stay until they are on stable ground with employment and a permanent place to live-up to 90 days.

Upward Bound assists the families to get permanent housing and jobs. The success rate is 95% that families remain in their permanent homes after placement.

On October 13 several Culver City Rotary Club members showed up at Upward Bound to see the fruits of their contributions. The Rotary grant provided everything for two individual studio apartments-from Tupperware, towels and coffee pots and other kitchen utensils to shower curtains and bathroom supplies, new bedding and other living accouterments.

The families are able to keep all these supplies when they move out to their permanent housing.

The Rotarians were given a tour of the facility from the kitchen/dining area, where residents receive two meals a day to the playground area for young children.

Food donations are common from charities and businesses (Google sends in three meals a week for residents) and are dived up among residents and backpacks are given to children to take with them to school, including their lunches and school supplies.

The kids go to local schools while they are there-a big change from the homeless community of living in cars or on the streets.

If a family comes in with more than three or four children the family is divided into two units next to each other. Also, the parents must be clean and sober when they arrive, and random drug tests are conducted for those with previous substance abuse issues.

Various services are provided to help the family including counseling, job assistance and permanent housing location. In addition, they are provided counseling services for a full year after their placements.

Counseling is a crucial need, since children especially suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after being homeless.

 

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