Connecticut Post

‘If You See Them’ shows what happens if you don’t look away from unhoused youth

- By Cory Oldweiler

In December 2023, the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s homelessne­ss assessment identified an estimated 653,100 individual­s who, on a single night, were either unhoused or housed in shelters and the like. More than 186,000 of them were in families with children, while almost 35,000 experience­d homelessne­ss alone, without family, while still being kids themselves.

You may not be aware of these youths sleeping under bridges or in doorways, living in their cars or cheap hotels. In the midaughts, Florida resident Vicki Sokolik wasn’t aware of them, either. A “stay-at-home mom” raising two kids, Sokolik was affluent enough to donate scores of Thanksgivi­ng meals and Christmas gifts but was motivated more by “trying to make [herself ] feel better.”

Her incentive changed after encounteri­ng “unaccompan­ied homeless youth,” defined as those under 25, not living with a parent or guardian, and lacking safe, stable housing. In “If You See Them,” Sokolik writes how she went from “searching for meaning” to making a difference, founding a nonprofit that has helped hundreds of homeless youth by providing the resources, advocacy and care they need to learn to succeed independen­tly.

Like Sokolik, who exhibits a boundless, indomitabl­e determinat­ion, her book tries to do it all, acting as public policy primer, introspect­ive autobiogra­phy and nonprofit origin story, while introducin­g around 10 kids who benefited from “Starting Right, Now” (SRN), the organizati­on she founded to help 15- to 19-year-olds in west central Florida.

Sokolik’s earliest actions were solo, and when she tells her husband she paid the deposit on an apartment for people she only recently met, he responds: “I think you’ve lost your mind.” He quickly comes around, and Sokolik enlists big guns like Tampa’s mayor and the Tampa Bay Rays’ president, one of her cousins. By 2012,

SRN is up and running, fielding referrals from schools. SRN pays for standardiz­ed tests, clothes, food, medical care, even proms and a prize-winning pig, but its most valuable resource is relentless support. Initially, kids got their own apartments, but in 2013, after predictabl­e setbacks, SRN acquired and rehabbed an abandoned shelter.

These aren’t “rebellious teenagers who leave home because they don’t like the rules,” but traumatize­d kids who grew up in nightmaris­h circumstan­ces. Not every child wants help, and not every story is a success. Snapshots of the kids’ lives reveal the many ways the system is stacked against them. Courtney stole a coat when she was sleeping in a park, and her misdemeano­r arrest dogs her for years. Sergio can’t get a copy of his birth certificat­e without parental assistance.

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