A classy effort
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Bryce Alderton
After a day of planting and painting, volunteers, friends and
residents at a Costa Mesa shelter basked in the glory of a refurbished
home Sunday.
A group of about 20 volunteers with Leadership Tomorrow’s class of
2002, along with friends and community members, labored Saturday, tilling
the soil, planting impatiens and tomatoes, painting walls and replacing
bathroom floors for residents of the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter.
Leadership Tomorrow, open to residents of Costa Mesa, Newport Beach
and Irvine who are pursuing management careers, is a yearlong program
that educates volunteers about their community, said Cindy Brenneman, a
member of the 2001 class.
Group members choose a project each year to work on, and this year
they chose the interfaith shelter.
“We took on the responsibility for making some changes to look as nice
as possible for them,” said Gregg Steward, a 2002 class member and a
Costa Mesa Fire Department battalion chief. “[The organization] will
expose you to people you can make contact with and help them find answers
to some of their needs.”
Volunteers painted the walls of five bedrooms and bathrooms, installed
new towel holders and planted flowers around the shelter Saturday. All of
the help was a welcome sight for a shelter that hasn’t seen maintenance
to this degree in three years, said Sheri Barrios, the shelter’s
executive director.
“It’s a 100% improvement,” Barrios said Sunday. “We were due for some
renovation.”
Shelter resident Melody McKown, 38, took advantage Sunday of the free
haircuts offered by students of the Paul Mitchell salon as she twirled
her blond hair.
McKown moved into the shelter five months ago with Lawrence Gibson,
38, and his two children.
Gibson drank a Snapple and commented on the friendliness between
neighbors as they ate pizza and talked together.
“This is the best it’s ever been,” Gibson said. “It’s more like
family.”
McKown and Gibson are in the shelter’s transitional program that
provides families a place to live for two to six months. Families must
agree to save 80% of their income to secure housing when they graduate
from the program.
Living off 20% of their total income is a challenge, said Gibson and
McKown, but they’re confident they will have enough money to rent an
apartment when they leave.
“We’re way passed what we expected,” Gibson said. “We’re hoping to
have first month’s rent and a deposit covered and then have enough to buy
a car.”
Families in the transitional program receive counseling, mental health
outreach and referral, help finding a job, access to child care and
parenting classes.
In addition to the transitional program, the shelter also offers
emergency shelter to families, couples and single women for three to
seven days, providing them with a bed, meals, laundry facilities,
transportation vouchers, counseling and referrals for jobs and housing
placement.
The shelter is the largest in Orange County, with the ability to house
18 families in the transitional program and between 60 and 65 people in
the nightly emergency program.
The goal of the shelter is to help homeless families become
self-supporting and move into stable housing.
* Bryce Alderton is the news assistant. He may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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