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Homelessness

HOMELESS UNITED FOR CHANGE - CIOP

HISTORY: Homeless United for Change, a CIOP partner and member organization, was first organized in January 2007 by a group of citizens concerned with homelessness in Springfield, IL. HUC's first public appearance was at the Springfield City Council meeting in April of 2007. Members of HUC with experience in program evaluation spent the first year studying the ten-year plans of twenty different cities to end chronic homelessness.

Housing First

PHILOSOPHY: HUC helps shed light on the plight of the homeless in Springfield and beyond. HUC supports the approach to addressing homelessness known as "Housing First". HUC promotes leadership and encourages individuals who have experienced homelessness to speak for themselves.

Please take a moment and watch the powerful video below of HUC witnessing their stories to the public (video courtesy of The State Journal Register, Springfield, IL).

HUC AND KHAN TEAM UP FOR HOMELESS AWARENESS WEEK
HUC in Illinios Times

Box cities aren't that uncommon on college campus quads to raise awareness of homeless issues. But what happens when organized homeless leaders from two states join up in a downtown church parking lot with 25 refrigerator boxes and 30 degree weather?

They get together, tell their advocate friends how to stay warm, and share stories and songs.

A car load of key leaders from Kalamazoo Homeless Action Network (KHAN) joined up with over 20 leaders of Homeless United for Change (HUC-CIOP) in a show of solidarity in the last weekend of Homeless Awareness Week. The action was covered by the local ABC station which reported live from the site at 6 and 10pm.

HUC KHAN

Both organizations are spearheading very similar organizing drives in their communities, separated by 251 miles but joined by a common respect for human rights. This became clear when KHAN leaders presented a brief leadership training session for HUC members at First Presbyterian Church - the official unofficial HUC headquarters. And while there were the sharing of stories about police abuse and city unresponsiveness, most of the real conversation was about KHAN's move toward a Kalamazoo housing fund and HUC's campaign for a day center and housing first.

The leaders agreed to connect up again in Washington with NPA, and work together to meet with the federal interagency office on homelessness.

HOMELESS UNITED FOR CHANGE HONORED
HUC Honored

Springfield CIOP member organization Homeless United for Change was honored by the Greater Springfield Interfaith Association with the 2008 Humanitarian of the Year award on September 23rd, 2008, at the Association's annual fall welcoming banquet. Homeless United for Change (HUC) was the first group, rather than an individual, to be awarded this honor. Accepting the award for HUC were CIOP leaders and partners, JoAnna Moore and Barb Olson.

Read about it in the State Journal Register...

THE HOMELESS TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS: WITH CLEAR GOALS, HUC GOES TO WORK

By Fletcher Farrar at Illinois Times, January 8, 2009

At this business meeting of homeless people, some of the speeches are long and rambling, but that's no different from many of the church and professional meetings I sit through regularly. What is different from many meetings I attend is that the business is important and the focus is clear. Advocacy for the homeless by the homeless, and the move toward self-governance represented by Homeless United for Change, is a development more meaningful than any help social service agencies can provide.

HUC Leaders

At the group's regular weekly meeting at First Presbyterian Church, members stuffed envelopes for a fundraising campaign to send members of their group to a March leadership training event in Washington, D.C., as they moved through their agenda. The first issue on the floor was the need for homeless people to know their legal rights as a protection against harassment. A member had been told that police had issued tickets to some homeless people who were doing nothing but walking on the sidewalk. Details of the incident were sketchy, but meeting leaders decided to go around the room and ask each of the 15 people at the meeting whether they thought a lawyer should be invited in to speak to the members about their rights.

James Lewis, one of the older members there, thought it would be fine to invite a lawyer in; he and his nephew had been harassed and discriminated against just recently. But some of the homeless themselves are giving all homeless people a bad name, he said. "I see too much disrespect going on in the library. I see homeless people coming in and talking loud and walking all over the place. We're asked not to sleep at the library, but some were drunk and falling asleep. People get to the point they don't want to help you when you act like this."

Then a member rose to complain that he hadn't been treated right when he sought medical attention one night for pain that turned out to be a pancreatic problem. He said he was turned out into the cold that night, then later referred to a doctor in Chatham. But he has no way to get to Chatham.

Barb Olson, organizer of HUC and one of the few non-homeless participants in the meeting, offered a strong defense of Springfield's hospitals for the free treatment they provide to the city's poor. "Still it's true that homeless people are overlooked by almost every service provider in the city," she said. To the man with the medical problem, she said she longs for the time when Springfield has a proper day center for the homeless. "I hope that a doctor will come once a week, someone who knows you and will work for you. He can make calls for you and say, 'What's up with sending this man all the way to Chatham?'"

Springfield's patchwork system of homeless shelters and services seems to be working fairly well this winter, so far. But the proposed day center, so important it has been assigned to a planning subcommittee, is the ultimate goal. Dreams for such a center include computers with Internet access, telephones to search for jobs and housing, showers and storage for belongings. While volunteering at S.O.S. recently, I asked one of the HUC leaders the question that has been on my mind. If we make people too comfortable, won't they lose their incentive to become self-sufficient?

If people are stressed out from the struggle to survive, he explained to me patiently in the course of a long conversation, they can't do anything else. It's only when they're comfortable that they can do the work needed to improve their situations.

After an hour and a half, the business agenda was completed and it was time for members to head for the shelters. With assignments made for work to be done before next week, the meeting was adjourned.

Contributions to help send HUC members to the National People's Action Conference in Washington, D.C., March 21-23, may be mailed to Barb Olson, HUC organizer, 2123 Warwick Drive, Springfield, 62704. HUC meetings, open to the public, are 5 p.m. Mondays at First Presbyterian Church.

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JOIN HUC-CIOP!

HUC is community action by and for people who know homelessness. You are invited to join HUC each Monday at 5PM at the First Presbyterian Church, 321 S. 7th Street, across from the library.

Join HUC and make your voice heard!!!

HUC-CIOP IN THE NEWS

HUC is quite active and frequently in the news. Check out "HUC-CIOP in the news" through the following links:

  • April 2, 2009
  • July 21, 2008
  • July 17, 2008
  • July 17, 2008
  • July 4, 2008
  • April 3, 2008
  • March 27, 2008