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BLOG: APPLIED RESEARCH OF EMMANUEL GOSPEL CENTER
Homelessness & Collaboration: Starlight Ministry [VIDEO]
[VIDEO] Hear from ministers around the city how Starlight Ministries engages churches in collaboration to address local homelessness.
Homelessness & Collaboration: Starlight Ministry [VIDEO]
We need each other. Churches need to work together to address the homelessness crisis in the Boston area.
Starlight Ministries also sees that life-giving relationships with people affected by homelessness are mutually transforming. Christians can learn from our neighbors experiencing homelessness. Hear from those in Cambridge and Boston in regular relationship with unhoused friends and neighbors.
What Is Homelessness?
To address local homelessness, we need a clear picture of whom we seek to help. You may be surprised by who qualifies as part of the homeless population. What follows is an overview of how homelessness is defined in the US.
What Is Homelessness?
by Rudy Mitchell, Senior Researcher
Life can be destabilizing for those who don’t have a permanent place to live.
To address local homelessness, we need a clear picture of whom we seek to help. You may be surprised by who qualifies as part of the homeless population. What follows is an overview of how homelessness is defined in the U.S.
Pine Street Inn, New England's largest homeless shelter in Boston
Who Defines Homelessness in the US?
Definitions of homelessness vary due to differing political and program purposes:
The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has a somewhat narrow and precise definition aimed at determining eligibility for housing assistance.
Advocates for homeless programs often have broader definitions to access more care resources.
People and programs seeking to prevent homelessness among at-risk people include in their definition people who are in unstable or irregular housing. For example, some definitions include families who are doubled up or people sleeping on couches, both of whom are without permanent housing.
Health centers most often use the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) definition in providing health services.
Homelessness in Detail
For a quick look at the practical realities, observe the precise way HUD defines a state of homelessness. The HUD definition includes four qualifying situations:
“An individual or family who lacks a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence” (including people who are sleeping in a car, a park, abandoned building, station, or who are sleeping in a shelter, transitional housing, or motel paid for by government or charitable organization).
“An individual or family imminently (within 14 days) losing (being evicted from) their primary nighttime residence with no subsequent residence identified and the household lacks the resources or support networks to obtain other permanent housing.”
“People, including unaccompanied youth or families with children and youth, with persistent housing instability evidenced by several characteristics.”
“Any individual or family who is fleeing or attempting to flee domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, stalking, or other life-threatening conditions, and has no other residence or resources to obtain other permanent housing.”
Not all Homelessness is created equal
The experience of homelessness follows many paths and forms, and each person has a unique story. But Kuhn et al. have identified three main types of experiences in the US.
Shelter Guests by Life Situation
Transitional Homelessness — an individual spends a short time in a shelter before transitioning into permanent housing
Episodic Homelessness — an individual who is frequently in and out of shelters and stays for a short time
Chronic Homelessness — an individual who has been homeless for 12 consecutive months or has had four or more episodes of homelessness totaling 12 months over three years and has a disability. In Boston, chronic shelter guests are even lower, only about 6%. But the chronic homeless typically use half of all shelter days over the course of a year.
Take Action to End Homelessness
According to U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness, ending homelessness is achieved when individuals who fall into homelessness experience it as a brief crisis and quickly move forward on a path to housing.
"We believe that better cooperation amongst churches and community organizations could better serve the current need," writes Rev. Cynthia Hymes-Bell of EGC's Starlight Ministry. "Our vision is that every church and Christian group in Greater Boston who wants to engage people affected by homelessness will be equipped to do so wisely."
5 Entry Points for Churches to Address Homelessness
Addressing homelessness effectively can surprise our intuition. Learn about entry points from those who study homelessness as a system.
5 Entry Points for Churches to Address Homelessness
by EGC Starlight Ministries
Since 1990, Starlight Ministries has equipped individuals to build life-changing relationships with people affected by homelessness. Starlight trains individuals and groups in classroom settings as well as hands-on ministry venues. These opportunities provide the Church and those struggling with homelessness with effective tools for building communities where all can experience personal transformation through Jesus Christ.
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