The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett homeless shelter to accept women, children

Long- awaited facility in Norcross to open in next 30 to 60 days.

- By Tyler Wilkins tyler. wilkins@ ajc. com

Finding food and shelter can be as easy as going home, but for hundreds of homeless people living in Gwinnett, it is a daily challenge.

Nicole Love Hendrickso­n learned the toll these experience­s take on someone while spending her childhood years on

public assistance and bouncing in and out of homeless shelters with her siblings.

Today, after running on a platform to lower homelessne­ss, food insecurity and poverty, Hendrickso­n is the fifirst Black woman to serve as chairwoman of the Gwinnett County Board of Commission­ers. Impassione­d by her childhood experience­s and career in social work, Hendrickso­n and her colleagues are helping open the county’s fifirst offifficia­l homeless shelter.

“I’ve always been passionate

about serving in this role, pushing for resources, policies and programs to address these issues and get people out of poverty.”

Hendrickso­n said. “It breaks my heart when I see kids that have to go through that because I know exactly what that feels like. It’s devastatin­g, and it really has an

impact on you.” Homefirst Gwinnett, a homeless initiative under the nonprofifi­t United Way of Greater Atlanta, will open its long- awaited Norcross shelter for homeless women and children in the next 30 to 60 days.

The shelter has taken longer

t han expected, f acing several delays due to the COVID- 19 pandemic. It will only hold 20 beds and allow three families to fill its rooms for the time being due to social distancing requiremen­ts, said Matt Elder, the organizati­on’s director. The shelter will take both single women and single moms with children, letting

them stay for up to 90 days while helping them find their next home.

Elders hopes the shelter will be the first of several for the homeless to seek refuge, despite only helping a handful of women and children at a time. Instead of building a single large shelter, the organizati­on hopes to build smaller ones across the count y to meet those in need wherever they’re already located, he said.

The county has spent about $ 2.6 million over the past three years to help fund Homefirst Gwinnett, covering some of the costs for both the upcoming shelter and its Norcross Assessment Center, which opened last year. The organizati­on, which requires $ 700,000 annually to operate with seven staff members, provides a one- stop service provider through its center for people experienci­ng housing insecurity.

Over the past 12 months, the center has matched more than 10,000 individual­s with shelter and eviction prevention and given 100 people a place to stay during the cold winter months with its warming shelter, Elder said.

“I think it’ s a positive step forward, but obviously there needs to be more,” said Elder, who grew up in Lawrencevi­lle. “We’re saying we need to build four or five of these facilities that all include shelter components. Our thought is not only do we need more beds, but we need to be doing them in this smaller, almost boutique style that allows us to work with clients on a more intimate level.”

Georgia’s Department of Community Affairs counted nearly 300 unsheltere­d and sheltered homeless Gwinnett County residents in its most recent Report on Homelessne­ss study conducted in 2019. However, experts say the study undercount­s, mostly relying on homeless individual­s found at shelters or on the streets.

The large geographic area of Gwinnett County and its suburban nature presents a unique challenge for accurately monitoring the issue, Elder said. Rather than congregati­ng on street corners, many of the county’s homeless population seek refuge elsewhere — in relatives’ homes, wooded areas, cars or one of the county’s 55 extended- stay motels and hotels.

Elder believes anywhere f rom 8,000 t o 1 0,000 of Gwinnett’s nearly 1 million residents are homeless. In its most recent count, Gwinnett County Public Schools classifies more than 1,000 students as homeless, said Tinisha Parker, executive director of student services for the school system.

Several nonprofit and faith- based organizati­ons in Gwinnett help homeless individual­s of all genders and their families find a place to sleep, some offering a few temporary beds or programs to get people back on their feet. While not ideal, the initiative and other county programs help provide vouchers for extended- stay hotels and motels.

“The only thing extended- stays care about are their bottom line,” Hendrickso­n said. “They don’t care that these individual­s have a path to economic opportunit­ies ( or) have a desire to become homeowners one day. They’re a short- term, temporary solution … and I don’t think ( they solve) the long- term i ssue of getting these individual­s to a path of self- sufficienc­y.”

Getting to the root of the issues that directly or indirectly cause homelessne­ss will be key for keeping people in their own homes, Hendrickso­n said. County offic i al s are currently wrapping up a housing study to see where more affordable housing is needed, as well as looking at ways to prevent food deserts from cropping up in blighted areas, she said.

“I feel like I have an obligation to now pay it forward,” Hendrickso­n said. “I have charted the path for myself, but it’s my responsibi­lity to now chart a path forward for other families that are struggling the same way ( I did) so that children, single women and those facing addiction see a way out.”

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC 2020 ?? A year af ter opening it s assessment center, Homefirst Gwinnett will soon open it s fifirst homeless shelter for women and children i n Norcross. Matt Elder, the organizati­on’s director, hopes the shelter will be the fifirst of several for the homeless.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC 2020 A year af ter opening it s assessment center, Homefirst Gwinnett will soon open it s fifirst homeless shelter for women and children i n Norcross. Matt Elder, the organizati­on’s director, hopes the shelter will be the fifirst of several for the homeless.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? Gwinnett County Commission Chair Nicole Love Hendrickso­n is passionate about the county’s fifirst offifficia­l homeless shelter, soon to open in Norcross.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM Gwinnett County Commission Chair Nicole Love Hendrickso­n is passionate about the county’s fifirst offifficia­l homeless shelter, soon to open in Norcross.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Gwinnett County’s first homeless shelter will initially hold 20 beds and allow three families to fill its rooms due to social distancing requiremen­ts. The shelter will accept single women and single moms with children, letting them stay for up to 90 days.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Gwinnett County’s first homeless shelter will initially hold 20 beds and allow three families to fill its rooms due to social distancing requiremen­ts. The shelter will accept single women and single moms with children, letting them stay for up to 90 days.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN ?? Matt Elder, director of the center managing the new homeless shelter, says it will provide immediate shelter for people in need but also help in finding permanent homes for the temporary residents.
JENNI GIRTMAN Matt Elder, director of the center managing the new homeless shelter, says it will provide immediate shelter for people in need but also help in finding permanent homes for the temporary residents.

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