'It's hard all year round': Rochester partners help people experiencing homelessness [Post-Bulletin, Rochester, Minn.]
Jan. 27—ROCHESTER —
She lives on
"I was going to see if I get could help with either my utilities or rent this month because I get
"It's hard all year round. I've been homeless before a few times," Burchard said. "My life was a mess back then. I try to do what I can now, you know, keep it together."
Burchard was one of the people attending Friday's Project Community Connect event at
For free, people could get lunch, receive a haircut, get a photo ID, get a flu shot, get help with legal services and get help finding a job.
In addition, tax assistance and help staving off mortgage foreclosures was available.
Buchard lives with health issues and receives dialysis care. On Friday, she visited the self-care booths, including a foot massage, manicure and haircut. She laughed with the
"I got to keep pushing forward because I'm fighting for my life every day," Burchard said. "And I try to stay positive. This stuff ain't going to beat me."
"This helps me as well after I get back home I can get on my knees and say, 'Lord, thank you.' He heard our prayers. I wasn't the only one, I know," Gathwright said.
She also came searching for mental health care, such as at Fernbrook Family Center, after noticing she was becoming "outraged" and crying often due to the loss of her family.
"I lost all my family, except for a sister and a brother. And I'm here in
"(I'm getting information on) mental health in care to visit me at home instead of me having to come out all the time because I got plantar fasciitis in my feet it hurts if I walk too long," Gathwright said. "I have a chair that I push but didn't bring it because of the snow. They don't really clean the snow and the ice off the sidewalks and all like that."
With his backpack, tote bag and colorful skateboard,
"This is just more like a house so we have just bedrooms and some of them are singles and some of them are shared rooms," Johnson described. "I'm in one of the shared rooms and my roommate drives me absolutely crazy every day."
Johnson and his roommate need to move due to their fighting. He's connected with The Landing MN and other housing options he knows in the area. But with the requirements and wait lists, Johnson said "what it sounds like is pretty much just wait until I'm actually on the street." He hopes "(housing) will work out. If not, I'm adept to the street."
He previously camped in a tent for a year and a half. The winter days "can be cold. Push a shopping cart with bedding," Johnson said. He sometimes uses hand sanitizer from The Landing to create a fire in his tent.
"Hopefully I'm just going to get a job and I don't have to worry about all that. Just get a job and return to 'normal' living," Johnson said. "But I still have a driver's license that should be helpful, help get me a job."
With adults, youth and kids experiencing homelessness or struggling to make ends meet, Project Community Connect also brings people together for the
point-in-time count
, which is a federal count of people experiencing homelessness.
"It's hard to talk to people at like midnight when they're trying to sleep and it's cold," Fiedler said. "Between counting people here and counting at the shelters, we think that we're accessing most everybody."
The federal count will include people who are couch surfing for the first time this year, and "there's a lot of people actually doing that," Fiedler said.
While the event was smaller returning for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic, people came for employment, housing and food. The partnerships help people who are struggling as well as help vendors and nursing students learn more about people's experiences with homelessness.
"These nurses will probably go work in acute care, they will go work in a hospital but they will know where resources are," Fiedler said. "They will be able to speak to their patients about, 'I know where you can look for housing or let's connect legal services to see if they can find you money to stay.' My students in the hospital will have a good handle on how to find resources for their patients who are struggling."
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