Pubdate: Sun, 06 Jan 2002 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Website: http://www.news-record.com/ Address: 200 East Market Street, Greensboro NC 27401 Email: 2002 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Fax: (336)373-7067 Author: Taft Wireback, Staff Writer, News & Record Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) HOMELESS PROGRAMS GET $900,000 GREENSBORO -- At Mary's House and other programs for the homeless in Greensboro, they don't have money to provide a lot of extras for the people they're helping. The wish list at Mary's House goes from diapers to a backyard bench and a copier machine, says Kathy Grumblatt, director of the program on Guilford Avenue that aids women recovering from substance abuse. "We need prayers and money, not necessarily in that order," says Grumblatt. But Mary's House and four other programs for Greensboro's homeless at least know they have a nest egg to help with basic services, especially important at this time of year when the demand for shelter is acute. They're sharing in the largest award ever to Greensboro homeless programs from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. In late November, the agency announced grants totaling $900,000 to Mary's House, Greensboro Urban Ministry, Family Service of the Piedmont, Christian Counseling and Wellness Group, and the Servant Center. Mary's House will receive about $135,000 of the federal money. Individual grants for the other groups range from $47,000 to nearly $600,000. The large grant is the fruit of cooperation, leaders of the various groups say. Instead of going it alone and battling each other for grants, Greensboro's homeless agencies work together on a yearly plan that covers a variety of homeless situations. Their latest grant application covered programs helping women left homeless after physical abuse, men and women battling drug addiction, people who are homeless because of medical disability, and those trying to return to a productive life after being homeless. "This kind of money won't come to a community where people are not working together," says Beth McKee-Huger, director of the Greensboro Housing Coalition. "We're putting all the puzzle pieces together." McKee-Huger's group coordinates the collaborative effort. It also moderates a monthly meeting of the various homeless groups, at which staff members discuss their programs and how they fit into the overall effort. Once a year, the group votes on its yearly request of the federal agency. When it started several years ago, staff members often listed their own programs as highest priority, McKee-Huger says. But that has changed; many now vote for other programs that they see as better suited to filling an immediate need, McKee Huger says. The federal agency's pattern has been to provide a relatively large sum to help start a program, then continue with smaller grants until the new program is established, says Gail Haworth of the Servant Center, which helps homeless people who are disabled. "We have all been recipients of the major amount," said Haworth. Haworth's group received a $400,000 grant in 1996 to begin its program. It was awarded about $53,000 this year. The lion's share of this year's money went to Christian Counseling and Wellness, which got $500,000 to renovate parts of the dilapidated St. James Homes complex on Eugene Street as permanent housing for formerly homeless people who are disabled. The group also received $88,000 for its Prince of Peace Haven program on Huffine Mill Road for homeless men fighting drug problems. The other two recipients are Urban Ministry's Partnership Village complex, which will receive $78,750, and Family Service's Clara House for battered women, which is getting $47,300. Partnership Village on Greenbriar Road is for formerly homeless people who need help making the transition to a more stable lifestyle. "The basic idea is that within two years, they get on their feet and become a self-supporting individual or family," said the Rev. Mike Aiken, Urban Ministry's director. The coalition of homeless groups will begin developing its 2002 grant package in the next few months. McKee-Huger said that one item that might be included is a computer system to keep track of homeless services in the community, the demand for those services and the kinds of help that each homeless person has received. Contact Taft Wireback at 373-7100 or at --- MAP posted-by: Jackl