Have you ever felt like throwing up your hands in frustration? Sometimes it can feel like “nothing” is working or “everything” is against you. Each of us has strengths. Even if the odds are truly against us, there are actions we can take.
The Mayor’s Office of Homeless Services has declared a winter shelter warning for Tuesday, January 14, 2025 at 4 pm until Thursday, January 14, 2025, at 9 am. Call 211 (available 24/7) or 443-984-9540 to connect with shelter. Get more info here.
10.01.20
By Kevin Lindamood, President & CEO
I don’t want to return to the world that we knew before COVID-19.
I can’t turn away from what this pandemic has revealed about us: White Americans benefit at the cost of everyone else. It is plain to see in the number of Black lives lost to poverty and homelessness.
Will you join me in solving this societal disgrace?
While some people wish we could “return to normal,” the truth is: It wasn’t working. It hasn’t worked for generations.
Every day we meet the needs of individuals who are suffering, but we also lead changes to the systems that treat people like Britney and her family unfairly.
Britney* is a determined mother who completed a training program, found a job and moved from a shelter into an apartment. Like nearly 16 million Black Americans, she had employer-sponsored insurance, but could not afford to use it.
So we provided her with medical care and therapy, and the laugh of her son James became a familiar sound at our pediatric clinic.
And then COVID-19 came and Britney’s job vanished.
Britney is one of thousands of people who have turned to us during the pandemic, the majority of whom are Black. She and James continue to see us today.
Our doors will remain open as long as we are needed. But changing government policies is the only way we can end the racist injustices that cause homelessness.
Your donation today helps meet basic human needs now and in the future by:
Dr. Michael Eric Dyson once said, “We must never ignore the injustices that make charity necessary, or the inequalities that make it possible.”
We need to acknowledge the harm we have done to African Americans and other communities of color. And we must create a new normal that includes health and safety for all of us.
Your donation is an investment in on-the-ground health care and urgent advocacy.
Have you ever felt like throwing up your hands in frustration? Sometimes it can feel like “nothing” is working or “everything” is against you. Each of us has strengths. Even if the odds are truly against us, there are actions we can take.
Send one email today to advocate for housing that serves all Marylanders. Let Governor Moore know that more permanent supportive housing is a good thing—and urge him to stay the course.
At our annual staff holiday party, we take time to honor and celebrate staff members who best represent our Core Values and one HCH-er at Heart.
Larrice is a mother, grandmother, teacher, cook and storyteller who was recently featured in our original documentary, “Taking Care: Portraits from Baltimore.”