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Causes: Emergency Assistance, Food, Food Programs, Human Service Organizations, Human Services
Mission: To coordinate efforts of volunteers to serve food to those in need and to educate the public about the needs of the poor and hungry in the city of syracuse.
Programs: The 2017-2018 fiscal year marked the samaritan center's third year of operation at its new facility at the former st. John the evangelist church on the city's north-side. During the reporting year, we served over 124,000 meals to those in need. Our new location continues to allow us to expand our casemanagement and support services, allowing us to more effectively address the complex issues that bring individuals and families in poverty to our door. Samaritan center continues to provide case management and support services for those that come to us in need, providing the linkages, referrals and support needed to move toward self-sufficiency. Our casemanager and support services team assisted more than 260 individuals with issues such as shelter, mental health care, employment and access to services, while an additional 2,345 individuals were assisted through agencies coordinated on site to ease access to snap, disability services, substance abuse services, mental health care, housing assistance, legal assistance and health care. Two new programs were initiated during the year. A monthly diaper distribution was started in partnership with the cny diaper bank. Through this program registered families receive 50 diapers per month per enrolled child to assist with child care needs. We have paired this distribution with on site agencies access to services targeted to young families, such as healthy families, wic, huntington family center, healthy families and the onondaga county lead abatement program. In addition, parents and their children receive a meal during distribution and parents are able to relax and connect as their children participate in a craft or reading activity facilitated by samaritan staff. Over 80 children are currently enrolled in the program, a number capped by the cny diaper bank. During this period we also started a program called my place, where individuals and families transitioning into independent housing, typically from shelter, are assisted with basic essentials such as sheets, pillows, dishes, pots and pans, towels and sheets. Through these basic needs, and the accompanying referrals for furniture and other support needs, this significant move toward self-sufficiency can be celebrated as a positive next step rather than what, without this program, is typically a move into an empty space with no belongings. This my place "starter box" helps individuals and families begin to make a home out of four empty walls. We were also pleased to host, in partnership with the volunteer lawyer project, a three part educational series focused on tenants rights and responsibilities- preparing our guests with the information needed to make good decisions as they sign onto a lease and look to maintain housing stability in the community.