The Pueblo Chieftain

Pueblo to vote on homeless job program

Would pay them to clean up trash around town

- Josué Perez Pueblo Chieftain USA TODAY NETWORK

Unhoused Puebloans may soon get a chance to earn a wage while helping city staff clean up different parts of town.

Pueblo City Council in the coming weeks is expected to vote on a subrecipie­nt agreement between the city and Catholic Charities of Southern Colorado. The agreement would grant $200,000 to the nonprofit to cover operationa­l and other costs associated with a job readiness program for Pueblo’s unhoused.

As part of the agreement, Catholic Charities would recruit people who are homeless to help city staff and volunteers during cleanup projects around Pueblo. The purpose of the program is to “provide support and job readiness services that may lead to employment for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss,” the agreement states.

Program participan­ts would earn a $50 daily stipend before earning a wage if they complete a certain amount of volunteer hours. Those wages would be $14.42 in 2024 and $15.69 in 2025. They would be paid through the nonprofit’s payroll.

Participan­ts would be employed in the program for a maximum of 12 weeks, during which time they’d be required to search and apply for regular employment opportunit­ies.

The nonprofit would help with that search and provide other assistance, such as transporta­tion vouchers, food assistance, shoes, clothing, and interview attire to participan­ts, according to the agreement.

The contract also states that Catholic Charities would engage at least 30 people in the program, with

the goal of retaining around 20 of them in the first year. The nonprofit would provide quarterly program reports to the city.

The partnershi­p between Catholic Charities and the city would be the latest effort by the latter to assist the unhoused and also address a long-standing complaint of some residents — excessive trash and debris in certain sections of the city.

In 2022, the city used $1 million from its American Rescue Plan Act funds to start its Team Up to Clean Up program. Since then, the team has removed hundreds of tons of trash in different parts of Pueblo, some of which were strewn with thousands of shopping carts, tires and other debris.

The city hired qualified candidates as part of Team Up to Clean Up and at times floated the idea of adopting another program that could help Pueblo’s unhoused and achieve the city’s goal of cleaning up parts of Pueblo.

Cities in other states have adopted similar programs for unhoused individual­s.

In Seattle, a job training program is helping the unhoused to obtain skills to enter trade careers. Some women in Sacramento obtained housing, found jobs and went back to school after graduating from a nine-week job readiness program, KCRA reported.

Chieftain reporter Josué Perez can be reached at JHPerez@gannett.com. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter, at @josuepwrit­es. Support local news, subscribe to The Pueblo Chieftain at subscribe.chieftain.com.

 ?? ZACHARY ALLEN/THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN ?? Piles of trash and other discarded waste from illegal dumping and nearby homeless camps near Fountain Creek have been the target of a multiday cleanup by the City of Pueblo.
ZACHARY ALLEN/THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN Piles of trash and other discarded waste from illegal dumping and nearby homeless camps near Fountain Creek have been the target of a multiday cleanup by the City of Pueblo.

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