Los Angeles Times

Program pairs volunteers, the homeless

Initiative in San Diego seeks to provide support, mentorship and friendship.

- By Gary Warth Warth writes for the San Diego Union- Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Sometimes the road out of homelessne­ss can begin with something as simple as getting an identifica­tion card, f illing out the right form or talking with the right social worker.

And sometimes, it takes a friend in the know to help with those things.

With that in mind, the San Diego Rescue Mission is launching Walk With Me, an outreach program that will pair volunteers with homeless people on a one- to- one basis.

“I feel like the mission’s been playing defense for 65 years,” said Rescue Mission President and Chief Executive Donnie Dee, who often turns to sports analogies because of a career that included playing tight end with the Indianapol­is Colts and Seattle Seahawks in the late 1980s.

“I want to play offense, and offense to me is to be more out there, out in the community, meeting people who are experienci­ng homelessne­ss.”

Walk With Me, now in its pilot phase, is a homeless outreach program that will be significan­tly different from traditiona­l outreach teams run by law enforcemen­t or social workers who often encounter several homeless people in a single day, including some they are meeting for the first time.

In the mission’s new program, connection­s are made not by chance encounters but by pairing volunteers, known as friends, with homeless people, known as neighbors. Each friend will work with only one neighbor in a yearlong commitment, with the two meeting four to six hours a month.

Dee said training in the program will begin in January, with a plan to recruit 100 volunteers from churches and other groups in 2021.

“We can’t change the state of homelessne­ss by hiring enough staff to do all that we want to do,” he said. “We’ve got to engage churches and corporatio­ns around the area. Then we begin to cover more ground.”

Funded with a $ 100,000 grant from the Lucky Duck Foundation, the mission is creating a training program that will be led by profession­als from the Regional Task Force on the Homeless, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, People Assisting the Homeless and other groups.

Planned as recorded, online sessions, the training will teach friends how to respectful­ly interact with someone experienci­ng homelessne­ss and how to help people overcoming trauma. Friends also will learn about the variety of services available to their neighbor, which could lead to employment and housing.

“Maybe you’re helping them get their driver’s license,” Dee said. “Maybe you’re helping them get signed up for rapid rehousing. Maybe you’re helping them get into a program like the San Diego Rescue Mission, or maybe you’re helping them think through what their career might be. They’ll be trained on all of that.”

Michelle Le Beau, director of church partnershi­ps at the mission, developed the program. Dee said working with churches was a natural f it because congregati­ons already have active volunteers who want to help homeless people.

The program is open to others who want to volunteer, and people can apply online under the programs section of the mission’s website, at www.sdrescue.org.

“We’ll f ind people who want somebody to walk with them through this journey in their life,” Dee said, explaining the process. “If you want to be paired up, you don’t just go out and f ind somebody and say, ‘ This is my guy.’ You actually contact us, and we do a Zoom interview with you to make sure you’re a good fit.”

The program was proposed by Rescue Mission board member Mary Benirschke, who said she got the idea while working with homeless people in downtown San Diego through a ministry program with the Rock Church.

“If we can just get to know them, we’re going to understand what kinds of things they need, and we’re going to be able to support them,” she said.

Benirschke said the ministry program involved projecting sermons by Pastor Miles McPherson of the Rock Church onto a screen set up behind a store in a neighborho­od with a large homeless population. Over time, she came to know some of the people who frequented the event.

“They are very cautious about people who come up to them, so developing trust and having patience over time is important,” she said.

Benirschke also has a background working with people who have disabiliti­es, and the experience helped her form what she called the person- centered approach to Walk With Me.

Besides helping homeless people become self- suff icient and deal with issues related to their homelessne­ss, Benirschke said the program also will have a powerful effect on the volunteers.

“I personally think we’re going to change the perspectiv­e of homeless people in our community, and I think it can be done in other cities, too,” she said.

She said her husband, former Charger Rolf Benirschke, is interested in becoming a friend in the program, and her sister Teri Jasper is one of the f irst of about 10 friends in the pilot phase.

Patti McCord, who has participat­ed in the downtown Rock Church program with Benirschke, also was one of the f irst friends. She was paired with Patricia Gaines, a member of the Voices of Our City homeless choir who may be recognized for her solo spokenword performanc­e in the song “Sounds of the Sidewalk” when the group performed on “America’s Got Talent.”

“How I have helped her?” McCord said. “No, she’s helped me. Seeing their spirit was amazing to me. I’ve never seen anything like that.”

Although their training hasn’t started, McCord said she anticipate­s she will provide everything from emotional support to help in what may be considered mundane but vital tasks.

“We’ll be able to jump in and say, ‘ I can help you with that, I can help you write that letter,’ ” she said. “We’ll be able to help with some things that we take for granted. I’m looking forward to being the hands and feet, on a practical side, and I’m excited to continue to be the emotional help.”

 ?? Mary Benirschke ?? A SAN DIEGO Rescue Mission program matches volunteers with homeless people. Teri Jasper, left, and Cindy Braun, right, work with Sam and Christine, center.
Mary Benirschke A SAN DIEGO Rescue Mission program matches volunteers with homeless people. Teri Jasper, left, and Cindy Braun, right, work with Sam and Christine, center.

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