home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 48CLEVELANDBuilding Transitions to Safety
-
-
-
- It is hard to imagine what the owners of Cleveland's
- abandoned 76-room Travemotel must have thought when Sister
- Loretta and Sister Donna announced that they wanted to buy what
- they called a "notorious cathouse." "Sister Donna and I had
- about $1.98 between us," recalls Sister Loretta. But the two
- nuns of the Sisters of St. Joseph had other assets, acquired
- during years of working to help the poor against heavy odds,
- that they leveraged into a remarkable deal. They managed to
- raise the $270,000 purchase price from banks, churches,
- government organizations and James Rouse's Enterprise
- Foundation -- plus an additional $400,000 for renovations. From
- that unlikely beginning was born Transitional Housing Inc.
- (THI), a way station for women traveling between emergency
- shelters and permanent homes.
-
- The nuns knew that many homeless women have trouble moving
- directly from a shelter into a place of their own, even if
- apartments are available -- and affordable. A few months on the
- streets can leave a person deeply alienated and frightened of
- returning to "normal" life. Through self-esteem seminars,
- employment training, drug counseling and other programs, women
- are prepared to return to the job marretrieve children from
- foster care and set up homes.
-
- More than 400 women have stayed, usually for about 13
- months, since THI opened its doors in 1986. Roughly 65% of the
- cases involved alcohol and drug use, while 85% of the residents
- had been physically or sexually abused. This halfway house was
- their first experience of safety -- and for many, of
- responsibility as well. "This place saved my life," says Lynn
- Morozko, who sells her plasma and works at a women's shelter
- while earning a degree in design engineering. "A lot of people
- think homelessness is a type of social Darwinism," she says.
- "But it isn't stupid people who are homeless. It's that we hit
- walls that we can't get over by ourselves." Fortunately,
- Transitional Housing is perfecting the art of building ladders.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-