Las Vegas Review-Journal

Student’s nonprofit to help Las Vegas homeless

Pop-up shop will offer clothes, haircuts, showers

- By Kimber Laux Las Vegas Review-journal

Sydney Grover pulled a blouse from a trash bag and laid it atop a growing pile of clothes in her Las Vegas garage. She described how a blog she started out of her college dorm room in Phoenix blossomed into a nonprofit that helps homeless people in her native Las Vegas.

Grover, 20, had one goal when she began interviewi­ng people for her blog Can You Spare a Story in 2016: humanizing the homeless.

“I just want my readers and my volunteers to not avoid eye contact when they drive by a homeless person on the street,” Grover said. “I’ve met so many incredible individual­s who just needed the opportunit­y to talk to someone who cares.”

Grover, a Grand Canyon University student, said the idea was born out of passion and boredom. She wasn’t allowed to get a job because he rmom wanted her to focus on schoolwork. Instead, she left her camera and a notebook in her car and began stopping to talk to homeless people holding cardboard signs.

She met the subject of her second interview, Rocky, in Tempe, Arizona, on Halloween in 2016. Rocky, a Navy veteran in a wheelchair who lived under a bridge, was well-known in the Tempe area for saying hello to everyone.

“I just saw so much of my grandfathe­r in him,” Grover said.

When she started the blog, Grover thought her mom and friends would be her only readers. But by the time she decided she could do more to help the homeless as a nonprofit, she had thousands of readers.

The blog became a nonprofit organizati­on in July 2017, and Grover’s mission shifted to helping the homeless view themselves differentl­y.

“We aim to provide the basic necessitie­s that make people feel confident enough to get back on their feet,” Grover said. “We want to provide more than just clothing. We want to provide the opportunit­y to get a job, to get a home.”

She plans to open her Priceless Pop-up Shop from 8 to 11 a.m. Saturday at Care Complex, 200 Foremaster Lane, to give the homeless a chance to shop for clothes.

Some of Can You Spare a Story’s 40 volunteers will be on hand to help homeless clients find the pieces and sizes they want. A donated mobile shower truck will be on-site, and four volunteer stylists from local salons will offer free haircuts.

Each patron will get 10 tickets to shop for 10 clothing items.

She hopes patrons feel like they are at a department store.

“We want it to be a personal shopping experience without the fear of cost,” said Grover, who has collected jewelry and perfume to help women. “I know those are two things that make me feel beautiful, and I want to make these individual­s feel beautiful as well. It’s so important for individual­s to feel like individual­s, no matter where they call home.”

Contact Kimber Laux at klaux@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @lauxkimber on Twitter.

 ?? Marcus Villagran ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @brokejourn­alist Sydney Grover, founder of the nonprofit Can You Spare a Story, organizes clothes by gender and size Sunday in her Las Vegas home.
Marcus Villagran Las Vegas Review-journal @brokejourn­alist Sydney Grover, founder of the nonprofit Can You Spare a Story, organizes clothes by gender and size Sunday in her Las Vegas home.

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