Chattanooga Times Free Press

Neediest Cases helps local woman with rental deposit after fire leaves her homeless

- BY EMILY CRISMAN STAFF WRITER

When Chattanoog­a resident Stephanie Carson lost her rental home and everything she had in an electrical fire last November, she did not have renter’s insurance.

The local chapter of the American Red Cross paid for a hotel room where Carson could stay for a week and also gave her a voucher for furniture

— although she had nowhere to put it — and a voucher for food.

She said the Ooltewah organizati­on where the voucher was redeemable initially turned her away because she lacked identifica­tion, which burned in the fire with everything else she owned.

Carson said she knows renter’s insurance is relatively inexpensiv­e, but she feels most people would also choose to pay their power bill if they only had the money to pay one or the other.

At the time of the fire, Carson’s mother was ill and in the hospital, so she was unable to stay with her when her weeklong hotel stay ended. Carson was homeless from November 2019 to February 2020, usually sleeping in her car or in a park.

“I thought mom was going to die, so it was pretty hard,” said Carson, who in addition to the fire and her mother’s illness was already dealing with mental health issues including paranoid schizophre­nia, bipolar disorder and depression.

She eventually called 211 for assistance from the local United Way and was referred to Family

“God is on his own time. I went through what I went through for his benefit so that I could have a testimony to glorify and worship him.” – STEPHANIE CARSON

Promise of Greater Chattanoog­a, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps low-income families become independen­t. Through the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press Neediest Cases Fund, within 24 hours caseworker Kathleen Wright was able to provide Carson with $500 to cover a deposit on a new place to live.

Once she got help from Family Promise, Carson said she brought her new ID to the Ooltewah organizati­on and redeemed the voucher from the Red Cross.

“It took me a while to go back, but I needed to because I didn’t have anything,” she said of returning to the organizati­on that previously turned her away.

Unforeseen circumstan­ces, such as the fire that left Carson homeless, are usually what put people in a position to seek help from Neediest Cases, Wright said.

Establishe­d in 1913 by then-Publisher Adolph Ochs of the Chattanoog­a Times, the Neediest Cases Fund is administer­ed by the United Way of Greater Chattanoog­a and provides one-time assistance to help people who find themselves unexpected­ly in need to get back on their feet.

“So many people feel like one-time assistance would be enough for them to become stable once again,” Wright said.

Carson said she doesn’t want to think about what may have happened if she didn’t get help from Family Promise and Neediest Cases, but she guesses that she probably would have been homeless for several more weeks.

“God is on his own time,” Carson said. “I went through what I went through for his benefit so that I could have a testimony to glorify and worship him.”

Donations to the Neediest Cases Fund are accepted through Dec. 31 and are recognized in the Times Free Press.

Read more stories of 2020 fund recipients at timesfreep­ress.com/ neediest-cases.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TROY STOLT ?? Stephanie Carson poses for a portrait in her apartment on Friday in Chattanoog­a. Carson, who was homeless for several months after losing her rental home and everything inside it in a fire, was able to pay a deposit on a new apartment through the Neediest Cases Fund.
STAFF PHOTO BY TROY STOLT Stephanie Carson poses for a portrait in her apartment on Friday in Chattanoog­a. Carson, who was homeless for several months after losing her rental home and everything inside it in a fire, was able to pay a deposit on a new apartment through the Neediest Cases Fund.

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