Tag Archives: motel

Teachers surprised by homeless children

Homeless children living in motels is not a new phenomenon, but it was news to some High Point teachers:

home-child“Groups of teachers from Oak Hill Elementary went door-to-door in their students’ neighborhoods to meet parents and remind them that Wednesday is the first day of class at their school.

The effort took teachers into some of the most impoverished areas of High Point, including a motel, a fact that surprised even veteran teachers.

‘That was a big shocker. I didn’t know you could just live there,’ said Catherin Howard, a fifth-grade teacher who left Pilot Elementary after 14 years to join the staff at Oak Hill.

Pilot has its share of poor students, too, but the reality that some might live at a motel, surrounded by a high fence and razor wire, was something new and saddening for Howard.”

It is a very sad reality, and one that many people don’t know or think about. Approximately 1.5 million children — 1 in 50 — experience homelessness in America every year. And North Carolina ranks 44th in the nation in child homelessness. Many of those kids are living in motels.

Speaking of all the school’s students, Howard added:

“I just want the children to feel loved. They’re going to be successful if they feel that way.”

Beautiful. All kids need love. And a supportive school environment with teachers who care (like Howard) can be a refuge of stability for a homeless child.

State of Homelessness in Guilford County: March 2010

pehPRESS RELEASE

Jehan Benton-Clark
For Immediate Release
336.553.2715 (O)
336.215.1295 (M)
Jehan@PartnersEndingHomelessness.org

State of Homelessness in Guilford County

Guilford County, NC—March 22, 2010– Homelessness has become a national issue of significant proportion with over 300 cities and counties across the country implementing plans to address this human tragedy.  In Guilford County, the Partners Ending Homelessness Initiative focuses on actively implementing, evaluating and updating Guilford County’s Ten Year Plan which is aimed at improving the quality of life for all residents of Guilford County by ending chronic homelessness and reducing all types of homelessness by 2016. The Partners Ending Homelessness Initiative focuses on generating housing and strengthening prevention & supportive services.
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Coliseum Inn vote tonight: No word on housing for residents

The Greensboro City Council is scheduled to vote tonight on buying the Coliseum Inn on High Point Road, and the plan is to tear down the hotel and sell the property to a developer.  I don’t really have a strong opinion for or against the City buying and razing the property (there are pros and cons both ways), but I do want to know what’s going to happen to the residents if the hotel is torn down.

Unlike a lot of hotels, where people check in and stay for a night or two while they’re traveling, the Coliseum Inn is used by many people, including families with children, as low-cost housing.  Without alternatives, some of these people are going to be homeless when and if the hotel closes.  A recent News & Record article says:

Closing the motel would also put some residents out on the streets.

The city staff have been working with nonprofits to determine how they can help low-income residents who call the hotel home, said Dyan Arkin with the department of housing and community development. Counselors may be provided to help residents find new housing.

Who are the non-profits that the City is talking to? What are the options for the Coliseum Inn residents? I’d really like to know. I emailed Council and met with representatives from the City’s Dept. of Housing and Community Development months ago, when I first heard of the possibility that the City might buy the hotel. But I haven’t heard anything from the City since that initial meeting.

Our housing programs are full. Our shelters are full. A group of us are currently having meetings about emergency winter shelter, because we already know there won’t be enough shelter for individuals and families this winter — and that’s before you factor in the closing of the Coliseum Inn.

I just want somebody to be honest and non-political at that Council meeting tonight.  If there’s a plan in place for those residents, awesome, tell us what it is.  If not, then say that.  And we’ll go from there.  As my homeless friends say, “Just tell it like it is.” Please.

Update: Got a call from a City staffer. There’s no magic solution for potentially displaced residents, “but there’s a recognition that there could be needs.” The conversation will continue.   I’ll be watching the meeting tonight. You can watch online here.

Update #2: Council voted to buy the property. So I guess the work begins now. [Sigh.]