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Agenda - 05-04-1999 - 7b
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Agenda - 05-04-1999 - 7b
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3/27/2009 4:47:51 PM
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3/27/2009 4:47:47 PM
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BOCC
Date
5/4/1999
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
7b
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Minutes - 19990504
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\1990's\1999
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a dramatic increase in the housing needs of homeless persons in Orange County. <br />From January 1 through December 1, 1994, the shelter served 879 individuals and <br />operated at capacity almost every night. Of this number: 645 were male and 234 <br />female. Further, 546 (61 %) were African-American; 272 (31 %) were White; 62 <br />(7%) were Hispanic and approximately one percent were Native American and <br />Other. The Community House served approximately 980 individuals during 1995. <br />Approximately 60% of those that stay in the shelter claim housing issues as the <br />premier life occurrence that lead them to the Triangle area seeking employment <br />without adequate funds to get re-established. <br />For battered women, emergency shelter is available only in the neighboring county, <br />Durham County, at the Orange/Durham Coalition for Battered Women shelter. Many <br />battered women from Orange County are unable or unwilling to use the Battered <br />Women's Shelter in Durham. ,The primary reason for this is that a move to Durham can <br />involve changing jobs or switching children's schools. There are also transportation <br />challenges in accessing the shelter. <br />The Community House as well as the Coalition for Battered Women have well <br />established networks for identifying homeless families and domestic violence victims <br />in Orange County. Organizations that may currently refer families to Community House <br />and/or the Coalition include OPC Mental Health, IFC, Family Services Division, the <br />Rape Crisis Center, Orange Congregations in Mission, the Department of Social <br />Services, the Chapel Hill/Carrboro School District, Day Care Services Association, the <br />Orange County Sheriff's Department, the local Helpline, area hospitals, local <br />congregations, local police departments, and other emergency shelters in the Triangle <br />area. <br />However, the existing emergency shelters are only designed for short-term stays. <br />Therefore, it was recognized that long term transitional housing was needed in this <br />community. <br />Transitional Housing and Supportive Housing_Needs <br />Project HomeStart <br />The Inter-Faith Council and the Orange/Durham Coalition for Battered Women <br />received a $1.3 million dollar HUD Supportive Housing grant for the construction of <br />transitional housing for their present client population. This new housing effort is named <br />Project HomeStart on the county-owned building site on Homestead Rd. in Chapel Hill. <br />Construction is completed and the housing has been occupied since the fall of 1998. <br />Specifically, Project Home Start has three main components which will help to fill the <br />transitional housing gap in Orange County: <br />18 <br />
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