Pubdate: Fri, 05 May 2000 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2000, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Forum: http://tampabayonline.net/interact/welcome.htm Author: Elizabeth Bettendorf of The Tampa Tribune COSTS HINDER SHELTER WORKING AGAINST DRUGS TAMPA - A local shelter offers the homeless something more than a bed and meal: self-sufficiency. Three years ago, George Bramlett's crack cocaine addiction cost him his last $1,000 and his 9-year-old son, Joey. The high he compared to someone ``spinning you around by the arms until you're dizzy'' had lost its newness long before. Yet he couldn't stop chasing it. On a steamy summer day, Bramlett wandered out of the Metropolitan Ministries Family Care Center in central Tampa and into a rundown motel to smoke crack. Three days later, from a pay phone in the rain, he dialed the shelter. ``They told me [the state] had taken Joey and put him in a foster home,'' he recalls in a drawl still thick with his Mississippi roots. After three decades of drugs, drink and heartache, Bramlett could only sit on the curb and cry. The next Monday, he was admitted to the nonprofit shelter's rehabilitation program for men. He has been clean ever since, and wears a Narcotics Anonymous medal around his neck to show it. But those who run the ministry say it didn't have to happen that way - that Bramlett's problems could have been caught when he arrived at the shelter, and that he never should have lost his son. Thursday, at its annual Bridge Builder's Breakfast in the Tampa Convention Center, Ministries officials presented a new plan to help the poor and homeless. It's a shift in thinking for the 27-year-old organization, prompted by realities of welfare reform, changes in public housing policy, and a $5.15 hourly minimum wage in a booming economy. ``The safety net is gone,'' says Ministries President Morris Hintzman. The goal of the eight-part plan, called ``Uplift U,'' is self-sufficiency for everyone who can handle it. That means not just sheltering people - but helping them hold on to their families, kick drug habits, learn to read, and acquire skills for better-paying jobs. An intensive intake program will help identify problems such as Bramlett's up front. Instead of the standard four-to six-week stint at the shelter, some families may stay as long as a year while they receive intensive help. ``It's a trend,'' says Chuck Currie, a board member of the National Coalition for the Homeless who runs a 24-bed shelter in Portland, Ore. ``Less and less are shelters just flophouses,'' he says. ``Instead, they're offering people a way to transition out of homelessness.`' The trend carries a price tag. Ministries officials figure that implementing their program could take three to five years and a 40 percent increase in their $5 million annual operating budget. They hope to raise the money mostly through donations. The change is warranted, though, because in just the last year they have seen more clients ``recycling,'' or returning to homelessness, said Karleen Kos, a vice president hired for $60,000 in February 1999 who is helping to develop the plan. ``We've noticed six or seven families in the last month who were homeless a year ago,'' Kos says. ``It's the same issues: eviction, which follows not enough money to pay bills, which follows the inability to get a good job.'' Bramlett, no longer homeless, now rents a bungalow in Sulphur Springs. He works part-time as a Ministries driver, ferrying addicts to self-help meetings. And he's raising Joey, who's nearly 12. ``By doing the right thing and turning my life around, I got my son back,'' he says. ``There's always hope.'' - -- Also announced Thursday was the Ministries' volunteer of the year: Joyce Keller, a University of Tampa administrative assistant who gives up two weeks of vacation to work at the shelter's holiday tent. She began 12 years ago through a program at Palma Ceia Presbyterian Church, and she now coordinates hundreds of volunteers in the busy holiday season. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg