Orange County NC Website
115 <br /> by the war on drugs including books such as Saving Our Own Lives by Shira Hassan and Drug <br /> Use for Grown-Ups by Carl L. Hart, and podcasts like Crackdown. We have compiled a running <br /> list of these educational resources that we provide to volunteers seeking to learn more. Moving <br /> forward, we plan to incorporate more direct voices from participants and people directly <br /> impacted by drug use through formal surveys, informal feedback discussions, and structured <br /> meetings with our CAB. All assistance provided will be voluntary and monetarily compensated. <br /> SHAC SSP serves a diverse population with a wide range of lived experiences and <br /> identities with a high degree of overlap with the prioritized groups for this funding source <br /> including Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) and those experiencing housing <br /> instability. Our program does not currently track participant demographic information, but IFC <br /> serves a population that is approximately 70% BIPOC, so our population at our weekly shift at <br /> IFC roughly reflects these demographics. We recognize the importance of collecting more <br /> comprehensive demographic information for improving our services and addressing health <br /> disparities, so moving forward, will enhance our data collection efforts to incorporate this data <br /> to better understand and meet the needs of the communities we serve. We will collaborate <br /> with our CAB to ensure that this information is collected in a manner that is sensitive, <br /> respectful, and prioritizes participant dignity over all else. <br /> Through our partnership with IFC, we provide critical support to individuals who use <br /> drugs who are also experiencing homelessness and housing instability. IFC provides emergency <br /> financial assistance for rent and utilities and provided over$110,000 in emergency assistance in <br /> 2022-2023. They supported 387 households with rent payments in 2023-2024. IFC also runs 24- <br /> hour shelters for individuals experiencing homelessness as well as a temporary cold weather <br /> shelter in the winter. Finally, IFC offers permanent supportive housing for community members <br /> with complex barriers that prevent them from being able to obtain and keep other housing. Our <br /> location within IFC enables us to offer harm reduction services to people reporting to IFC for <br /> housing assistance and to connect people seeking safe injection supplies directly to housing <br /> resources if needed. In this way, our collaboration with IFC expands our reach and generates a <br /> more integrated support network for vulnerable Orange County residents. We also serve <br /> people experiencing homelessness who do not use drugs but seek our services for first aid <br /> supplies, naloxone, and other materials. In addition to safe injection and overdose reversal <br /> supplies, we offer resources requested by the communities we serve, including items that help <br /> address some of the challenges of homelessness, such as bug spray, hand warmers, and <br /> hygiene products. <br /> Finally, we are also working to collaborate more closely with Orange County's Post <br /> Overdose Response Team (PORT). Their team can provide MOUD and gap coverage for <br /> individuals who are between providers or are having difficulty accessing their medication and <br /> can direct people to our resources for safer use and overdose response if interested. They also <br /> have a partnership with the Lantern Project working with individuals involved in the criminal <br /> legal system, which is crucial for managing overdose in the vulnerable post-release period and <br /> helping these individuals with reintegration. Though our program does not specifically focus on <br /> those transitioning from correctional settings, our broader network through collaborators like <br /> PORT can assist us in reaching these individuals with essential harm reduction supplies. <br />