The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Charities

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through collaborat­ion, Redner said. They decided to gather under the umbrella of Gwinnett Cares, a new hub for nonprofit services that would help people affected by the pandemic.

“Our goal was not to reinvent the wheel, but identify what our strengths were, where our weaknesses are, and where we needed to fill in the gaps,” said Paige Havens, a marketing consultant who has been working with Gwinnett Cares from its inception. “Working together instead of working in our own silos has made a difference tremendous­ly in how we can affect our community.”

Since March, Gwinnett Cares has grown to a network of more than 200 nonprofits, faith-based organizati­ons, private companies and local government­s. Dozens of events are hosted through Gwinnett Cares each month; more than 20 food drives and resource pickups with free food, clothing and personal care items were scheduled for the week of Thanksgivi­ng alone.

Gwinnett Cares also serves as an online portal for a myriad of resources, including job boards, affordable child care options and applicatio­ns for housing assistance.

In those first few months, the primary need was food, Redner said. As Gwinnett’s unemployme­nt rate jolted from 3% in January to 12% in March, the need for food pantry assistance spiked alongside it. The Community Foundation began a fundraisin­g effort with an initial goal of $300,000 and raised nearly $1.1 million in 60 days, Redner said. Gwinnett’s food pantries had to stock up on supplies, recruit more volunteers and quickly change their distributi­on methods in order to minimize contact between recipients and volunteers. The drive-thru method, in which groceries are loaded into a recipient’s trunk or back seat without any person-to-person contact, was quickly adopted.

“Our entire food system was built on a system where people got out of their cars and walked into our buildings. We couldn’t do that,” Redner said. “All of our food partners flipped to mobile in a week or less.”

Multiple cooperativ­e ministry groups have worked with Gwinnett Cares to hold regular food, clothing and personal care item distributi­ons. They’ve been giving out seven times as many items as they were before the pandemic struck, Havens said.

As it became clear that the pandemic would last more than a few weeks, Gwinnett Cares expanded its footprint. It added a workforce developmen­t team and held virtual and drive-thru job fairs. A multicultu­ral group was created to ensure appropriat­e resources were getting to communitie­s that primarily speak a language other than English, including the county’s large Latino and Korean communitie­s.

“You go from relief work to recovery work,” Redner said. “Relief work is what’s right in front of you, and the recovery is a little bit longer.”

The looming recovery challenge in Gwinnett is an expected deluge of eviction proceeding­s when the federal eviction moratorium expires Jan. 1. Evictions were first halted under the CARES Act in mid-march. A September order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended the moratorium through the end of the year. Neither action forgave rent that went unpaid during the moratorium­s.

Some eviction proceeding­s in Gwinnett have resumed, and representa­tives from Homefirst Gwinnett, a homelessne­ss and affordable housing initiative, have been at the courthouse every week to help those facing eviction. Homefirst partnered with Gwinnett County on Project RESET, which will use CARES Act funds to pay past due rent for up to 400 families. The funds must be used by the end of 2020, before the moratorium ends and an influx of eviction proceeding­s is expected. For those who may face eviction in 2021, Homefirst will work with Gwinnett Cares’ workforce developmen­t team to help people get back on their feet and able to pay down some of their overdue rent, said Matt Elder, Homefirst’s director.

The partnershi­ps through Gwinnett Cares are making it more efficient for people to find and give help, Elder said.

“It’s truly been a public, private, faith-based, nonprofit effort. It’s not just effective, but incredibly impactful for the people in the community who most need it,” Elder said. “These are individual­s and organizati­ons that have risen up to meet an unpreceden­ted need that nobody could’ve known was coming.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? High Praise Worship Center volunteer Giannella Rodriguez (center) helps a woman get her free box of food Nov. 21 at a apartment complex in Gwinnett County.
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON High Praise Worship Center volunteer Giannella Rodriguez (center) helps a woman get her free box of food Nov. 21 at a apartment complex in Gwinnett County.

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