Safe house
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Lolita Harper
Children who live at the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter in Costa Mesa
stay in apartments that are not their own, play with toys that are shared
and often wear secondhand clothes.
Garrett Zimmerman, 18, said the least he could give them was a place
they could call their own. Zimmerman, an Orange Coast College freshman,
built a playhouse at the shelter for his Eagle Scout project.
“The houses are so crowded, and it’s cool for the kids to have their
own space,” Zimmerman said.
Families at the shelter stay no longer than six months if they are
part of the transitional housing program, while others stay as little as
two nights. Many families are homeless, and some are women who are
escaping abusive partners.
The shelter provides a much-needed place to stay but cannot
accommodate certain luxuries, such as providing individual rooms for each
family member. Apartments are set up like dorms, with four families per
unit -- one family in each room.
Sheri Barrios, the center’s executive director, said the house was
built “with the imagination of a child and provides a warm, safe
environment for our children.”
The playhouse is bright and colorful, located next to the center’s
playground. The inside has trees, flowers and fluffy white clouds painted
on the walls and was designed by Zimmerman’s friend, Noel Sharpe, a
kindergarten teacher. Kids can sit on benches or bean bag chairs, or
write on the chalkboard while hanging out in the clubhouse.
Livio Campanotto, a transitional resident at the shelterand father of
three boys, said his three sons have enjoyed playing in the house.
“It has a lot of school-like items that they otherwise wouldn’t get a
chance to play with at home, since we are practically homeless,”
Campanotto said.
Zimmerman said he volunteered at the shelter with his dad while
attending Mater Dei High School. When it came time to complete his Eagle
Scout project -- a task that must be done to benefit a large sector of
the community -- he thought of the kids at the shelter.
“I’m so proud of him,” said father Robert Zimmerman.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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