Showing posts with label NEOCH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NEOCH. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2009

MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW: Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless 8th Annual Fundraiser Slated For Friday May 1st

Fund-raising dinner & silent auction benefits advocacy; essential links to services for the homeless of Greater Cleveland

NEOCH is the only non-profit organization in the Greater Cleveland area that assists the homeless by providing civil rights advocacy, a voice for the homeless population and links to essential services through its numerous programs.

"Hope Blossoms", the theme of this year's annual fundraiser will be held at Massimo Da Milano Italian restaurant located at the corner of Detroit Avenue and W. 25th Street in the Ohio City neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio. David Bernatowicz of Cuyahoga Community College will be the Keynote Speaker at this year's event on May 1, 2009 from 6:30 p.m. till 10 p.m.

Ticket information follows:
GOLD CORPORATE SPONSOR - $750: Includes reserved seating for 8, buffet dinner with open bar, full page ad in the program book and a link on NEOCH'S website. $638 is tax deductible!

SILVER CORPORATE SPONSOR - $500:
Includes reserved seating for 8, buffet dinner with open bar and half page ad in the program book. $388 is tax deductible!

TABLE OF FRIENDS - $400: Includes reserved seating for 8, buffet dinner with open bar. $288 is tax deductible!

INDIVIDUAL TICKETS
- $50:
Includes open seating and buffet dinner with open bar. $36 is tax deductible!

RSVP by APRIL 17, 2009. You can also RSVP by credit card on NEOCH's website (www.neoch.org) through NETWORK FOR GOOD!

Donations to the NORTHEAST OHIO COALITION FOR THE HOMELESS are ALWAYS WELCOME and can be made through NEOCH'S WEBSITE and the NETWORK FOR GOOD! Many volunteer opportunities are also available at the coalition.

For more information, please contact Teri Horne by phone at 216-432-0540 or e-mail at neoch@neoch.org.







Saturday, March 7, 2009

Photo: AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

Photo by Cynthia Miller - 2007
3631 Perkins Ave. - Cleveland, Ohio


It was 68 degrees Friday. Think Spring!

Don't forget to turn your clocks ahead this weekend.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

...and I got this really cool camera too!

Top photo: Steve Cagan (left) and Howard Singleton (center) discuss camera functions while Jerome Pleasant (right) and Gary Waterbeck (foreground) listen.



Class participant Gary Waterbeck double checks camera settings prior to taking his first picture on his new camera.


Kevin Cleary "Homeless Grapevine"
reporter readies the laptop computer for use by class participants.



All photos from the 2007 photography program by class participant, Cindy Miller .


In 2007 and 2008 the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless received a grant from ODDC (Ohio Developmental Disabilities Council) for its "Homeless Grapevine" street newspaper photography program.

The course objectives were to: teach a marketable skill to the class participants; raise awareness of homelessness through advocacy photography in venues including public showings and publication and raise funds for NEOCH programs as the result of the sale of the photos. The class participants received 50 percent from the sale of each photo.

Grant money, awarded to the coalition for the photography program, paid for the purchase of a professional quality photo printer, digital cameras with software for each of the class participants (with one to be used by NEOCH), photo print paper, matting and frames. Each graduate of the course received a stipend upon course completion.

Gary (my significant other) and I were among the four people who completed the initial digital photography course in 2007. Noted Cleveland Heights activism/social justice photographer Steve Cagan taught the class through sharing his expertise in activism photography.

Each week we were given an assignment, set loose with our cameras and returned the following week to upload our images into the computer while learning to import and fine tune the images in Photoshop.

Our individual works were published in the "Homeless Grapevine" newspaper; a NEOCH publication that helps homeless and formerly homeless low income individuals earn an honest living as independent vendors.

Not only were our photos published in the "Homeless Grapevine" newspaper and on various pages of the NEOCH website but our photographic works were on display and for sale at the main Phoenix Coffee location on Superior Avenue.

Throughout this blog and the future postings, I will include photos by participants of the 2007 and 2008 "Homeless Grapevine" photography program.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Photo: Take time to enjoy... a sunrise

Photo by Gary Waterbeck - 2007

The southern view from our 12th Floor Section 8 apartment in East Cleveland.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

FYI - Stimulus $ For Homeless

Homeless woman sleeping on RTA Rapid
Photo by Cindy Miller for the Homeless Photography Project 2007



If the impoverished and homeless had flown to Washington in private jets, they also would have been chastised. But would they have gotten their money anyway or just not as much?


A must read below by Brian Davis, Executive Director of the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless (NEOCH)

Click On The Link: http://clevelandhomeless.blogspot.com/2009/02/economic-stimulus-and-homelessness.html#links

Friday, February 20, 2009

There's No Better Time & Place To Invest For Your Future Than Now & At Home!

It was October 2008 when Steubenville Herald Star writer Janice Kiaski made a plea to readers asking them to submit their personal stories as to what made them thankful in 2008 during the Thanksgiving season.

In 2008, I had a lot to be thankful for so I responded to her plea by e-mailing her the following:



Hi Janice!
I read in the Herald Star that you wanted to hear from readers about what they are thankful for this Thanksgiving.

Here's my story briefly.

In 2005 I became homeless. I had been getting sick for many years, had difficulty working due to my disability and eventually lost my last job in 2003 because my symptoms interfered with my ability to function.

I struggled for over a year trying to fill out forms to apply for Social Security disability. I finally finished the forms in 2004.

After two denials from Social Security, I was evicted from my apartment of ten years. I was homeless for five months staying at a women's shelter in Cleveland, Ohio. Because of my disability, I was able to get assistance for a HUD funded apartment. On November 23, 2005 I received the key to my apartment. I will have to look at an old calendar but it was a day or two before Thanksgiving.

Because it was a holiday, the shelter permitted residents to sign out for the long holiday weekend without risk of losing our beds. Although I had no furniture, much less a bed to sleep on at the apartment, I decided to spend the long weekend there rather than at the shelter.

Thanksgiving Day I decided to take advantage of the free meal at The Hard Rock Cafe and stop back at the shelter to pick up some of my clothes. The weather was brutal and my legs cramped as if they were being crushed. I thought I was going to die waiting on a bus.

After the long weekend staying at my apartment sleeping on the floor, I went back to the shelter for a few nights until I got some furniture.

I was in HUD housing until I received my first lump check from Social Security in 2007.

I paid off 90% of my debt owed to creditors (the ones I could find), was approved for a mortgage and bought my first home. I moved back to Toronto in April 2008.

While in Cleveland I served on the Board of Trustees at The Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless (www.neoch.org) where I also volunteered and was a contributing writer and photographer for the street newspaper
"The Homeless Grapevine". I also served on the Advisory Board for Care Alliance; a health clinic that serves the homeless and poor of Greater Cleveland.

I have spoken about my experience with homelessness before The Truth Commission, at Case Western Reserve University and with various members of Cleveland City Council as a guest of Brian Davis, Executive Director of NEOCH.

I have been very busy remodeling, repairing and redecorating my home since moving in. I hope to get involved in the community next year regarding homeless causes. I have a wealth of information to share due to my association with the homeless coalition.

The title of my book (when I find the time to write it) will be "From Homeless to Homeowner". Michael Heaton of "The Plain Dealer" suggested "Homeless in 25 Minutes".

I have included some links:
http://homelessgrapevine.blogspot.com/ - see one of my many photos published in "The Homeless Grapevine" that was used on the masthead. Scroll down to stories about the photography program I participated in:
Plain Dealer Features Grapevine Photography Program & Grapevine Photography Program Celebrates Successful First Year

Stories I wrote:
http://www.neoch.org/grapevinearticles/72/fly_on_the_wall.htm
This was the first part of a series I wrote about conditions at Community Women's Shelter. I used the name Diana Dennis to mask my identity.

http://www.neoch.org/grapevinearticles/77/truth_commission_puts_poverty.htm
About the Truth Commission and my testimony in Cleveland.

If you are interested in my story, feel free to call me. I have also included some of the photos I took with the camera I received through the Homeless Photography program.



Several days later, Janice called me and interviewed me over the phone. Three personal stories were published in the Thanksgiving edition of The Herald Star with other personal stories appearing in the following Sunday edition.



Thankful for memories, miracles, having a home was also published in the Toronto Scene.



My intent of participating was to increase awareness about homelessness and from the positive feedback and acknowledgment I have received from friends, acquaintances and people who recognized me on the street, I accomplished my mission and made them aware that they too could become homeless at any time for any reason.



Due to the economic climate, not only worldwide but especially in their own hometown, the people here are fearful of loss of job, loss of family, loss of health with the additional financial burden of the associated medical expenses and potential loss of home. All three stories in Janice Kiaski's story bring those fears to light; that there are people in this community that they might know who experienced some sort of loss but have come through it with the help of friends, family or a non-profit social agency.



The population in the Ohio Valley has declined dramatically due to job loss in the steel industry. Other manufacturing facilities closed their doors for good in the late 1970s and my hometown with its much smaller population of close to 5200 has 158 families receiving groceries from the food bank in town.



But one thing this community does understand is volunteering and donating to the local charities that serve the people here. The residents here understand the possibility that they too may need help.



United Way surpassed their annual goal as well did the Toronto chapter of The Salvation Army. The people here come to the aid of anyone who needs help. They, as Congressman Charlie Wilson has said on numerous occasions "Get It!"



People often ask me about being homeless and how can they help others. My response as always is "support your community; the local small business owner and the charities that help your community". Friends want to help me put together personal care packets.



And, although she didn't publish everything that I sent in the e-mail sent her, Janice Kiaski told me I made her more aware too.