Project Homeless Connect dispenses help, hope and dignity

Julie Muhlstein, The Herald

Helping with life’s basic necessities — food, shelter and medical care — is the main mission, but Project Homeless Connect offers so much more.

It brings together services and people who need them. The annual event will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 27 at Cascade High School. For the fourth year at the Everett school, there will be free hot meals, on-the-spot health services, and information about housing and jobs, veterans programs, federal benefits and more.

It’s not all about bare necessities.

For people whose lives are daily struggles, helpers are there to answer intangible needs. By providing things most of us take for granted, volunteers pass along hope and the recognition of dignity in all people.

Suzanne Pate, a spokeswoman for the Snohomish Health District, said 1,000 pairs of shoes have been donated by Redeeming Soles, a Seattle-based nonprofit group. That’s a first for Project Homeless Connect.

Thirty hairstylists will be there, Pate said. Pet care will be available. And a photographer who volunteered last year will again take free family portraits.

“Pictures are so important to me. I take a million pictures of my kids,” said Christy Neigel, of Sultan, who plans to volunteer all day at the event. She will bring her Nikon D3200 camera and a photo printer, and will laminate pictures to make them portable and waterproof.

“It brings me a lot of joy to bring this kind of joy to others,” Neigel said.

Last year, more than 1,100 hot meals were served at Project Homeless Connect, and 670 backpacks and bags with toiletries given out. More backpacks are needed this year. Organizers expect more than 1,200 people, homeless or at risk of becoming homeless, to come to the event. At least 70 agencies and groups will offer help. Eyeglasses and hearing screening, job and education information, substance abuse and mental health services, the list of resources is long.

Held annually since 2008 and at Cascade since 2010, Project Homeless Connect is a collaboration between Snohomish County, the city of Everett and many service organizations. United Way of Snohomish County is the lead agency this year.

Neil Parekh, a spokesman for the local United Way, said the agency’s own United Way employee campaign raised money to bring two dental care vans to Project Homeless Connect this year. Dr. Steven Wolff, branch director of the dental clinic at Naval Station Everett, will be among service providers, Pate said.

Dental professionals will treat emergencies on the day of Project Homeless Connect. For the first time, Parekh said, a dental van will be back at Cascade the following day to treat people who have made appointments the day before, essentially doubling the dental care available in past years. Two denturists also will volunteer this year, another first, Pate said.

The health district will offer HIV and hepatitis tests, and free shots to prevent whooping cough.

Neigel learned about Project Homeless Connect from her husband, Joseph, who works for Snohomish County. She’s not a professional photographer, but hopes to do more charity work with the effort she calls Family Focus Portraits.

She remembers last year taking pictures of individuals, of children whose families couldn’t afford school pictures, and of one large family with three generations.

Neigel had a problem with a computer program at last year’s event, and her husband stopped by to help. “He only helped out a few minutes,” Neigel said.

Not long ago, she said, he was at a bus stop. Someone recognized him from their photo station, thanked him for a picture, and asked if they would be back at Project Homeless Connect this year.

“It makes me feel I’m doing something worthwhile,” Neigel said. “It’s an amazing event.”

Project Homeless

Connect needs items

Project Homeless Connect is scheduled for 9 a.m.-3 p.m. June 27 at Cascade High School, 801 E. Casino Road, Everett. Backpacks and toiletry items are needed. Donations may be dropped off during business hours by June 21 at:

YWCA Pathways for Women, 6027 208th St. SW, Lynnwood; and the Everett YWCA Regional Center, 3301 Broadway, Everett.

To donate money, mail checks made out to Everett Gospel Mission c/o Project Homeless Connect, to P.O. Box 423, Everett, WA 98206-0423.

Help us serve the homeless: Project Homeless Connect, June 27

One-day event needs donations of backpacks & toiletries; 1200 people expected
 
SNOHOMISH COUNTY, WASH. – More than 1,200 homeless people of all ages are expected at this year’s Project Homeless Connect event, set for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday, June 27 at Cascade High School auditorium/cafeteria, 801 E. Casino Rd., Everett, Wash., 98203.
 
The annual event assembles upwards of 70 agencies and resource groups to assist homeless individuals with free direct services including Department of Social and Health Services and veterans’ benefits counseling, medical and dental appointments, pet care, mental health support, haircuts, a hot meal, and housing information.
 
For the first time, free shoes – more than 1,000 of them – are being offered this year.
 
Project Homeless Connect builds on a national model to deliver immediate services and to improve long-term access to services.
 
Organizers are preparing backpacks filled with small toiletries to give away, but have fallen short of the number needed.
 
“We need donations of about 500 more backpacks and totes,” said Mary Anne Dillon, Senior Regional Director for the YWCA. “We also need the hotel-size soaps and toothpaste and other hygiene articles to put in the packs.”
 
Donations can be dropped off by 4 p.m. Friday, June 21 at two locations:
  • YWCA Pathways for Women, 6027 – 208th St., S.W., Lynnwood
  • Everett YWCA Regional Center, 3301 Broadway, Everett
 
Monetary donations by check should be made out to The Everett Gospel Mission c/o Project Homeless Connect, P.O. Box 423, Everett, Wash., 98206-0423.
 
“This event connectshomeless individuals with self-sufficiency, stability, and human dignity,” said Sylvia Anderson, Chief Executive Officer of the Everett Gospel Mission. “We need help from the community to do that with donations and volunteer work.”  
 
The 2013 countywide Point in Time count of homeless individuals in Snohomish County showed 1,996 people in 1,151 households without a permanent place to stay. Of the individuals counted this year, an estimated 757 (38%) were homeless children under the age of 18; 99 were homeless veterans; and 427 (21%) said they were victims of domestic violence, up from 363 last year.
 
Begun in Everett in 2009, Project Homeless Connect is a collaboration among the Snohomish County Human Services Department, United Way of Snohomish County the Snohomish Health District, the City of Everett, multiple nonprofits, volunteers and the Homeless Policy Task Force.
 
For information about the event, volunteer your services, or donate backpacks, please contact Svea Stromme, svea.stromme@uwsc.org, 425.374.5543.
 
You can also find more information about Project Homeless Connect on Facebook (www.facebook.com/phcsnoco), Twitter (@phcsnoco) and on the web at www.uwsc.org/phcsnoco.php  
 
 
Through a collaborative effort between Snohomish County, City of Everett and numerous service organizations, Snohomish County has hosted a Project Homeless event annually since 2008. Over the years, the event has continued to grow and serve the homeless and those at risk of being homeless in our county. Since the event’s inception, the space has increased in capacity, the number of services offered has greatly expanded and the number of clients coming to the event has grown. For the last three years, the event has been held at Cascade High School on Casino Road and the City of Everett transit system has given free rides to attendees. At that site, Project Homeless Connect served over 1000 clients each year.
 
This event brings together hundreds of service providers and community volunteers, all of whom donate their time and services to provide the clients with access to necessary services and resources. Everyone who attends that day is given a hot meal to eat, is served by the volunteers and is free to access any services they might need. Over the years, some of the most popular services have been dental care, vision checks, pet services, backpack and toiletry give aways, haircuts and housing services.
 
The lead agency of the event has shifted over the years from Housing Hope, Cocoon House, Snohomish County Health and Human Services, and now, to United Way of Snohomish County.