Colleagues,
Here are a few important updates:

1.  Locally - Rev. David Alger has been raising money to fill the gaps for people experiencing homelessness via Facebook - GoFundMe.  Associated Ministries is managing the fund as part of their regular Community Connections Resource Center.  The money is not for rent assistance.  It really is intended to fill those needs you can't get met any other way.  There is a little money in the fund now but the bulk of it won't be available until about April 25.  David's hope is that the fund continues to grow as more people make contributions.  

Here are the basics:
Staff or client calls 253-383-3056.  You key in extension 128 to get a caseworker.  You make a specific request.  The caseworker will ask some limited information about the client.  Associated Ministries generally cuts checks on Thursdays and the client or an agency representative can pick up the check.  Associated Ministries  can be flexible on this and have gotten payments to vendors the same day with the agency credit card.

The key contact is Ivette at 253-733-8279.
She is the program director of the Community Connections Resource Center and she has been with Associated Ministries for four years..

If there are any glitches, please let me know and I'll pass them on to David.

2.  The Tacoma Democratic Socialists of America, Tacoma Education Association and others put forward a petition to City of Tacoma leadership and the Tacoma School Board asking that high school gyms be opened as emergency shelters.  They selected the high schools because those gyms have showers.  As i'm writing this, I don't know what the school board decided.  

Note:  The remainder of this email is from today's Maureen's Musings so if you are on that list, you can stop now.  If you aren't and want to be, just let me know.  As you can tell, it's more of what I want to say whenever I want to say it.  

3.  Getting the CARES Act Economic Impact Payments - the $1200 to People Experiencing Homelessness
Senator Tina Smith (D-MN) and 27 sponsors sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Mnuchin regarding the direct relief payments from the CARES Act. The letter urges Secretary Mnuchin to make sure that people experiencing homeless know about their eligibility for these payments, and that Treasury find a way to distribute the money without creating barriers to access.  Note Sen. Patty Murray, D-WA signed off on the letter.  Here's Sen. Smith's press release with a link in the last line to the actual letter.  The beauty of the letter is that is lays out what the law requires of The Dept of Treasury and other federal agencies and provides guidance on how to ensure that people experiencing homelessness do receive these payments.  I told a colleague last night that we should present this as an economic development opportunity - 5000 people experiencing homelessness each receiving $1200 in federal money = $6M in new federal money all of which will likely go into the private sector.  I actually used that same argument in the mid-80's to get money from the City of Tacoma to staff our homeless outreach program - Housing First - for folks on streets who were so obviously eligible for SSI - I told the City it was the best Return on Investments they were going to see - in the case of SSI, that's a year after year return.  These COVID-19 checks are one time but they are one time checks for which people experiencing homelessness who have Social Security numbers are eligible.  My question is - are we going to do this and of so, how - on a local level or can we do this statewide?  

Another part of that conversation was my colleague saying that we needed to ask people experiencing homelessness what they thought - how this should be done.  And I stopped and wondered why I hadn't led with that because everything I've done with homeless people over the years always started with the needs they brought forward.  And then I realized that in those ten years, I was surrounded by people who had recently or were experiencing homelessness - they were the majority of our organization's staff, including shelter leadership.  

It's a blend I think - of what each of us brings to the table.  The real life experience of people living without a home, without a bank account.  The structural experience of those of us who understand the systems we need in order to apply for and safely and respectfully receive and make that money available.  Will some folks blow it?  Sure.  Some folks will blow their $600/week federal unemployment check.  But we can't design respectful systems around the few who will not make good decisions.  In the scheme of things, $1200 both is and is not a lot of money.

And now - if you want to work on this, please let me know.  Here's Sen. Smith's press release:

WASHINGTON, D.C. [04/07/20]—U.S. Senator Tina Smith (D-Minn.) is leading a Senate push to ensure the Trump Administration is taking the steps necessary to make certain that people experiencing homelessness in Minnesota and across the country receive coronavirus relief payments.

In a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin Tuesday, Sen. Smith and 27 of her Senate colleagues—including Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.)—urged him to consider the steep barriers people experiencing homelessness will confront when trying to access the direct stimulus payments provided in the recent bipartisan COVID-19 relief package. The senators also pressed Sec. Mnuchin to launch a public awareness campaign to make sure that people experiencing homelessness are aware of their eligibility for these payments.

“[P]eople experiencing homelessness face unique barriers to receiving the payments they are entitled to under the law. Many have no bank account in which they could receive a direct deposit, and no fixed address to receive a check in the mail – and if they do receive a check, fees at check cashing institutions are often exorbitantly high,” Sen. Smith and her colleagues wrote to Mnuchin. “[They] are among those most in need of the economic relief payments, but also are among the groups of individuals facing the biggest impediments to accessing those funds.”

In the letter, the senators asked Mnuchin to publish guidance stating that Americans without a permanent address or bank account are not precluded from relief payments. They also asked the Department to publish specific procedures to help those without a bank account, government-issued identification, or a permanent address get access to their payments. Finally, the senators pushed him to conduct a public awareness campaign aimed at identifying Americans experiencing homelessness and helping them get their payments.

You can read the letter here.

4.  More "Talking to White People" - those of you in "Maureen's Musings"  for the past year know that my good friend, now Dr. Atim George, who is African American, told me in no uncertain terms last year that my job was "talking to white people."   If you haven't seen this presentation, I encourage you to take a few minutes and take a look:  from the National Innovation Service - An Equitable Systems Transformation Framework for COVID-19.   https://www.nis.us/blog  This is hands-down the most user-friendly and brief presentation I've seen on racial equity.  Really, really - take time to click on the link.  

As always, 
Be safe.  Be kind.
Thank you for your work,
Maureen

MaureenHowardConsulting
maureenhowardconsulting@gmail.com

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