ELM's Community Connections project helps encourage organizations to work together to reduce duplication of services and leverage resources. Now, HPD and agencies that work with the homeless are asking for our help to reduce waste and duplication in the camps caused by well-meaning people dropping off food and supplies during the holidays. Individuals and churches that want to help the homeless might consider redirecting resources to programs that move homeless individuals toward self-sufficiency rather than dropping off gifts directly at the camps. Take a look at the information below to learn more about this community problem and what we can do to fix it. If bringing food, clothing and other supplies directly to Huntsville’s homeless camps this holiday season is at the top of your list, think again. There are better ways to help the homeless by working through local agencies. Help reduce trash by giving cash. #CashBeatsTrash
Here are a few of the many organizations that help the homeless in our community. You can make a donation on their websites.
Many thanks to WAAY-31 for working with us to get out the message that #CashBeatsTrash.
On a single night in January 2019, 17 out of every 10,000 people living in the U.S. were homeless.
Those 567,715 people represent every region, family status, gender and racial/ethnic group across our country. As cooler temperatures spread throughout the community, you may be wondering how you can best help these individuals get back on their feet.
The picture above shows trash at one of the homeless camps in Huntsville.
If bringing food, clothing and other supplies directly to Huntsville’s homeless camps is at the top of your list, think again.
Huntsville Police Sgt. Grady Thigpen, who works closely with Huntsville’s homeless population, said the City has a wealth of generous people and organizations who give directly to the camps throughout the year, especially the holidays. When they don’t talk with each other about their plans, those efforts often mean hundreds of pounds of food and other items are thrown away.
Sgt. Thigpen said City crews recently removed six dump truck loads of trash from a single camp.
“That’s huge,” he said. “We need to minimize the duplication of services, food, and trash that’s generated from those groups. It gets in our waterways and pollutes our streams and wooded areas.”
Fortunately, there are lots of ways you can still make a big impact on the homeless community.
Nonprofit agencies, community organizations, corporations, and churches are best served by using online CharityTracker software administered by The ELM Foundation, to identify what other local groups are doing to help the homeless.
“CharityTracker helps organizations coordinate their efforts and share resources,” said Huntsville City Council President Dr. Jennie Robinson. “They can find out who is doing what and when. If they can communicate with one another, that reduces duplication of services and fraud.”
Dr. Robinson, who serves as Board Secretary and Administrator for ELM, said churches use CharityTracker to work with agencies that serve the homeless rather than going directly to the camps.
“We’ve also had churches coordinate with one another so that they are not all taking meals on the same day,” she said. “This is a huge problem on Thanksgiving and Sundays when everyone decides to feed the homeless. All that food winds up as waste in the camps and creates a problem with rodents as well as creating a lot of work for City crews who have to clean it up.”
ELM hosts socially-distanced meetings each month at the Huntsville Dream Center and shares the meeting via Zoom for those unable to attend. The next meeting is on December 10 at 9 a.m.
Robinson encourages anyone interested in attending the next meeting or gaining a CharityTracker license to contact Jennifer Kinard at jen@elmhsv.org.
For a quick tutorial on how CharityTracker works, click here.
A $50,000 grant from the Community Foundation’s Women’s Philanthropy Society provided seed money for CharityTracker licenses and network startup costs in 2019. The Women’s Philanthropy Society awarded ELM an additional $25,000 grant to continue funding for the CharityTracker network through 2020.
Robinson said ELM has 211 local organizations on CharityTracker today.
“That number is growing daily and increased by 30% in April and May during the COVID shutdown,” she said.
If you’re an individual looking to give back, here are a few simple suggestions for how to help in more construction ways:
The City’s efforts to tackle homelessness have come a long way in recent years. Sgt. Thigpen said they recently started working with Huntsville-based Model Environment to help clean up the camps and offer employment to those who are chronically homeless.
By focusing on critical needs – like transportation, emergency shelter, employment and job skills training – the community can address not just the effects of homelessness, but why people end up there in the first place.
“Our general goal is to empower people and not enable them to just sustain,” Sgt. Thigpen said. “We want to push folks along to try to better themselves – whatever that may look like.”