Showing posts with label Project Homeless Connect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Project Homeless Connect. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Lindsay the Intern: Week Eight Musings

(This week, our Intern reflects on the sad place many people in this country are currently in, and discusses why it's a good thing to be a Eugenian.)


Recently, ShelterCare mentioned an Oprah segment in a blog entry. I am not going to go into detail as I am sure all the information is sitting below my entry, but I have to say that it was quite interesting and saddening to actually see the effects of these harsh economic times. People who used to have stable jobs and homes are being forced into tent towns all over the country. Until watching this segment, I had not felt truly affected by nation's crisis. Perhaps it is the fact that I am in the college bubble, where my loans are looming in the distant future instead of banging down my door. Or maybe it is simply that I am lucky to have a job and a family willing to support me. Either way, I have somehow managed to escape the fall out, for now anyway. I am thankful for that, but many people have not been so fortunate. Aside from the tent towns popping up everywhere, there are now people taking "survival jobs" just to stay afloat. Once successful realtors are trading in their business cards for brooms and picking up minimum wage checks. It is not such a bad thing that people are being forced to live more simply and rethink their extravagances, but it is scary that those who already live simply are now living unsafely.

If these hard times have knocked you off your feet, you must know that all is not lost. This Friday, at the Lane County Events Center, Project Homeless Connect is setting up shop. Here you will find resources, amenities, and luxuries to help ease the minds of those who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless. I have to say, the more I discover about Eugene and Lane County in general, the more I want to stay. I have not been to a city where people care more about the well being of their fellow citizens. Before I moved here, I couldn't name one human services organization in my hometown. I may be severely uninformed, but I had lived there for eleven years. It really makes me wonder. Anyway, cheers Eugene, keep up the good work!

Friday, January 23, 2009

Volunteers Make It Happen

(Here at ShelterCare, we depend on the devotion of volunteers from our community. This morning, our guestblogger Gene Obersinner, ShelterCare's dedicated Volunteer Coordinator, weighs in on some of the whys and hows of volunteerism).


Why volunteer? There are many reasons...

- To step outside of yourself. Helping persons less fortunate or in need can help you be less worried about your own problems and issues.

- To help a cause greater than yourself.

- Volunteering is a way to meet new people and do new things.

- Helping others can be a healthy challenge for yourself! It allows you to step outside of your comfort zone, and learn and grow as a human being.

- Having a regular activity that helps others can be a very calming, grounding life ritual for people, one that provides meaning and zest to life. 

-Volunteering can be a way for you to express a talent or skill that brings great joy to yourself and others.


Volunteers paint our Shankle Safe Haven facility during United Way's Day of Caring, 2008

How to Get Involved:

- Go to www.unitedwaylane.org or www.volunteermatch.org and check out hundreds of wonderful volunteer opportunities in the local area. 

- Project Homeless Connect is Friday, March 6. This is an awesome one-day event that reaches out to over 1,000 homeless individuals in the Eugene/Springfield area by providing an impressive array of services and hope! Be one of over 500 volunteers to come and help make the 3rd annual PHC Lane County the best one yet!

- ShelterCare is often in need of volunteers to be companions for individual residents, to transport clients to appointments, take them to the library, help them learn how to ride the bus, etc. Feel free to check out our opportunities at one of the websites mentioned above or by contacting Gene Obersinner, Volunteer Coordinator, at 541-686-1262 or at gobersinner@sheltercare.org.