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Officials looking for long term solution for homeless shelter
by Amelia Holliday
Staff Reporter
The Corner Haven homeless shelter in Hazard. (photo by Bailey Richards | Herald file)
The Corner Haven homeless shelter in Hazard. (photo by Bailey Richards | Herald file)
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HAZARD — After a rough financial year, which caused a temporary cutback on services in May, the Corner Haven homeless shelter in Hazard has been fully functional since November thanks to an advancement of grant money and donations from the community. However, without a more permanent source of funding, the shelter may find itself in trouble again.

Adrienne Bush, executive director of Community Ministries, said she has been working on some solutions to their economic issues.

“I’m working with an ad hoc committee with our board of directors to look at finding sustainable revenue for all our programs, including Corner Haven,” Bush said.

Bush said routes mainly being discussed are federal and state grants, which the organization has received in previous years, but there are some other options on the table.

“One of the things we worked on this summer and fall was giving different churches and businesses and civic groups an opportunity to invest in the shelter by helping out with recurring contributions and meals and whatever other kinds of supplies they can provide,” she said. “In May, we opened up a calendar and said, hey, these are the days that your church can come serve dinner. That’s something that really hadn’t been done before.”

Other things Bush said she and the board are considering to sustain recurring personnel, food, and equipment costs are coal severance allocations and new grants. The state budget has a $50,000 line item in coal severance funds for Corner Haven, $10,000 of which was advanced to the group in November when the shelter was reopened.

Bush also explained she is interested in getting funding through Medicaid for some services provided at the shelter.

“About half the folks we see there suffer from some kind of mental illness, so I’m continuing to work with Kentucky River Community Care to help serve those people, as well as we’re monitoring the state Medicaid Advantage Care situation, and if it ever gets straightened out we would like to start billing for the services we provide on site,” she said.

While there are many options for the organization, Bush said nothing is a guarantee.

“I don’t have any silver bullet solutions,” Bush said. “We will do as much as we can for as long as we can do it.”

Comments
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ILoveHazard
|
January 11, 2013
The long term solution to this problem is to get these people off their butts and have them go to work. As long as someone puts a free roof over their head and free food in their mouth, why work? My place of work has hired people from there in the past and most of them were useless as workers, and several were thieves. Save money - close this place and buy these deadbeats a bus ticket to somewhere.
GoWildcats!
|
January 19, 2013
Apparently, you didn't read the part of the article that stated "about half the folks" that use that shelter are mentally ill. Your solution to the problem (of lack of funding and homelessness, whether it be due to mental illness or not) is to ship them out! How compassionate of you! Even if you could buy them a bus ticket to "somewhere", where is "somewhere"? Where would you like them to go? Another town? State? Country? Homelessness will ALWAYS exist. Especially, as long as mental illnesses go untreated. Just because you have had bad experiences in your workplace in the past with some from this shelter, it should be closed? That's your answer? I hope to God you are not one of those tough typing hypocrites that call themselves a Christian. If your not a Christian, well, so be it and know I personally feel you are a bit harsh and callous toward the mentally ill and less fortunate in your community. If you do indeed consider yourself a Christian, then why not take up the Lord's work and volunteer at this shelter before passing judgment to the extent of stating the shelter should be condemned? You and your community would undoubtedly be better off for it. And, if you are a Christian, you already know it would undoubtedly please the Lord! I'm not trying to bash you or anything. I'm just trying to let you see things from a different perspective. If you volunteer there (or any shelter), you surely will. I don't doubt there are those that are not willing to do for themselves or work hard in this world. However, the help should be there for those who legitimately need it. And we, as a community, should make sure it's there because we can! God Bless!
granny1234
|
February 19, 2013
I would like to just say to ILOVEHAZARD that you are cold hearted. I thank God for people that will give their money and time to this place and others like them.I happen to know someone that is there and THANK God that they were there to help her. She has lost EVERYTHING that she loved and is in severe depression.I do hope and pray that you are not one of the one's that will have to go there. It would be real nice if maybe you would cook something and take it down to someone that might really need some food and a smile.
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