Laguna Playhouse
Laguna Playhouse

Church Volunteers Help County in the Wee Hours – Trabuco Canyon residents braved rain early Saturday January 26th to participate in a biennial survey of the Orange County homeless

Date:

 

 

Hi I'm ManuellaHi I'm MasanoriHi I'm Wilfried

 

By Melanie Hoopes

Several Trabuco Canyon residents braved rain early Saturday January 26th to participate in a biennial survey of the Orange County homeless.

The roughly 700 volunteers came from several Orange County charities and attended detailed training in preparation for the homeless count.  OC Partnerships, an organization which coordinates efforts among the private and government groups who serve the homeless, spearheaded the effort, which also included 220 formerly homeless guides who have first-hand knowledge of the county’s homeless situation.

The volunteers reported at 4 a.m, were divided into groups and assigned a guide and an area. Surveys forms and maps were distributed, along with gift cards and bus passes to offer the homeless for helping with the survey.

Alicia Carnesi of Trabuco Canyon wasn’t deterred by the early hour or the rain.  “It’s amazing that several of the people I surveyed have been out on the streets for more than three years,” she said. “Laguna Beach does a better job than other Orange County cities in caring for its homeless,” said guide Maurice Lopez.  “They open the churches when it rains, that’s why we didn’t find too many today.”

Many volunteers were disappointed that they weren’t able to survey more homeless—and offer them the gifts—but the information they gathered is still useful.

“Every homeless person I surveyed was either addicted to drugs or alcohol, or suffered from mental illness,” said Melanie Hoopes of Trabuco Canyon.  “Clearly it’s not just shelters that they need.”

Every other January, communities across the country are required to take a point-in-time census of their sheltered and unsheltered homeless population in order to receive federal funding for services. In 2011, Orange County received $16.2 million in SuperNOFA Continuum of Care funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.  OC Partnerships currently estimates there are 18,300 homeless in Orange County.

The 2011 survey was criticized for not having enough volunteers, but this year the OC Partnership reached out to local churches, including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, which provided enough volunteers that a separate training session was set up for them.  This year more than four times more volunteers were trained than in 2011.  The results of the survey will be available in May.

http://getconnected.unitedwayoc.org/volunteer/agency/need/?need_id=352

Karen Lake

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Media Director

Santa  Margarita Stake

www.mormons.org

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Look!

The Arts at Saddleback College

Drink, Mommy!

drinkmommy

Marketing Help

your-ad-agency

Free Bible

http://www.mormon.org/

Local Sponsors

seaworld
sawdust
legoland
masters-
universal
Zoo
disneyland
komen
knotts
Pain Moche
Advertise on Aliso Laguna News
Moulton Water District

Popular

More like this
Related

Volunteers Help Bring Award-Winning Elks U.S.A. Float to Life at the 2026 Rose Parade

By Jenny Buford The beauty and brilliance of the Elks...

Elks Lodge #2444 Celebrates 20 Years of Giving Dictionaries to Local Students

The Mission Viejo–Saddleback Valley Elks Lodge #2444 proudly announces...

Low-Cost Pet Vaccination Clinics

RSM Low-Cost Pet Vaccination Clinic scheduled for Tuesday, January...

Mission Viejo–Saddleback Valley Elks Lodge #2444 Welcomes New Members

 The Mission Viejo–Saddleback Valley Elks Lodge #2444 recently welcomed...