BrokenRoots: Helping the Homeless: “There’s no turning back!”

( – promoted by buhdydharma )

(crossposted at DailyKos)Can a single individual make a dent in the homelessness crisis in America?  

Meet Jory John, former programs director at 826 Valencia and creator of The Peanut Butter Plan, and Mark Horvarth, a formerly homeless Hollywood video producer, who is heading back home from a 2 1/2 month long road trip blogging (he’s Hardly Normal), photographing, filming, and interacting with community service organizations, volunteers and the nation’s homeless for InvisiblePeople.tv.

As new P&J volunteer centers spring up across the US and The Peanut Butter Facebook group swells past 2000, John discusses his quest to expand and improve his fledgling organization, to maximize impact. And Horvarth, on the final leg of his road trip across America, is undoubtedly changed forever by the ‘shock and awe’ of documenting our nation’s ‘invisible people.”

The most significant thing uniting these two men? The realization that “there’s no turning back.”

stellaroo’s diary:

Jory John’s daily walk to work from his home in San Francisco’s Upper Market district brought him face to face with the city’s homeless camps outside the neighborhood’s huge Safeway. They were drawn there no doubt, by the huge recycling bins (a source of income), the public toilet, and easy access to relatively affluent shoppers for some ‘spare change.’

“One day, I just walked into Safeway, bought a loaf of bread and some peanut butter and jelly, went outside, started making sandwiches and handing them out,” John recalls. “Then I got the idea to start a project and publicize it on Facebook. It took a while to gather momentum but now we have 12 groups in cities all around the country. Just last week we passed 2000 members.”

In fact, the Peanut Butter Plan also has a chapter in London, where a school teacher is engaging her students in sandwich making.

“I love the idea of kids being involved in this, he says. “The kids make the sandwiches and then the adults pick them up and bring them to distribution points.”

The group is constantly evolving, says John. Weekly phone meetups among each location’s point-people facilitate idea exchanges.  In Austin, for example, volunteers have begun  distributing water along with sandwiches. The menu has also expanded around the country, with the addition of turkey, cheese or cucumber sandwiches. And Jory no longer designates the first Monday of the Month as the group’s day of action; when they work and how they set up their plans is totally flexible.

The group is constantly evolving, says John. Weekly e-mails among each location’s point-people facilitate idea exchanges.  In Phoenix, for example, volunteers have begun  distributing water along with sandwiches. The menu has also expanded around the country, with the addition of turkey, cheese or cucumber sandwiches. And Jory no longer designates the first Monday of the Month as the group’s day of action; when they work and how they set up their plans is totally flexible.

“I think what we are seeing here in America is the beginning of something enormous, he says. “It’s a zeitgeist, a collective consciousness which is activating people all over the world to take matters in their own hands and do what they can to change things for the better. Sure, times are pretty frightening, but on the other hand, in terms of this great awakening we’re experiencing, it is a very inspiring and exciting time to be alive.”

“A lot of people making small changes in their lives can actually make a huge difference,” he says.

Peanut Butter Plan from The Quotidian on Vimeo

To become a Point-Person, email [email protected].

Point-Person duties include:

1. Inviting all of your friends to parties, asking them to join the Facebook group, keeping them in the loop about events, and helping with general promotion.

2. Hosting or ensuring that there’s at least one sandwich-making party in your city or town per month, where people can meet each other, make a ton of sandwiches and coordinate logistics.

3. Reminding people in your town about the Peanut Butter Plan (a couple days before the first of every month).

4. Sending in any sort of pictures or stories, etc. that could be fun and inspirational, which we’ll post on this site and on the Facebook group.

5. If you’re feeling motivated, helping Jory find other Point-People in other cities.

“What we need is a Yelp for nonprofits”

Last July 16, Mark Horvarth departed from Las Vegas on a roadtrip across the country, using social media tools like Twitter to share news and videos depicting the raw truth about homelessness in America. Yesterday, as the former Los Angeles television executive headed towards Chicago, he acknowledged that his journey into the underbelly of America has forever changed  his perception of how we, as individuals, ought to be addressing the homeless problem.

“Before I left I used to think it was okay to just go and be a friend to the homeless, give them some food or whatever,” says Horvarth, who was himself homeless 14 years ago and is currently unemployed.  “Now, what has changed is the realization that we just can’t do this ‘Lone Ranger’ mentality anymore. We need to look at our communities and see who is having an impact on homelessness and support them. We need to support those who are helping people with housing and jobs.”

Horvarth suggests viewing these two ultra-short videos back-to-back, (one animated, the other real) for a powerful demonstration of the raw impact of homelessness.



Beth’s Story: An animation.

Angela from InvisiblePeople.tv on Vimeo.

Angela’s Story on InvisiblePeople.tv

“The most dramatic thing that has really changed me is Angela. I met her under a bridge in Atlanta. I asked her how she occupied her days and she responded she spent her days in church. A man from a  faith-based ministry was with me.  I asked what are you doing for Angela. They were bringing her sandwiches! We need to do more than that. It’s okay to feed people in a park as long as we are taking action to get them out of the park.”

“What we need is a nonprofit Yelp, where volunteers can find the places that are effective and those that aren’t. This could  also help organizations that aren’t doing it right to wake up and change. It’s not that the organizations are bad. They are tapped. They don’t have enough money or enough training. They are overwhelmed.”

Horvarth’s advice to volunteers? Don’t be discouraged by your first ‘turn off’, or your second. “Do the footwork, because once you find a place where you can make an impact you will stay around and it is so worth it!”

One of Horvarth’s favorite homeless services is Laundry Love. The project encourages volunteers to show up once a week with some laundry detergent and quarters. Clean clothes can have a huge impact on an individual’s self-esteem and dignity. And a laundromat can become a contact point as well, a place for people to connect to services.

“A friend of mine suggested (and I agree) that what we need is a volunteer iPhone application … like when you shake your phone it tells you right away a place nearby where you can volunteer,” Horvarth says. “We just need an entrepreneur who could develop something like that.”

Other Resources

Mobile Loaves and Fishes

Imagine LA

Family Promise



Habitat on Wheels: Austin

11 comments

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    • stellaroo on September 21, 2009 at 01:33
      Author

    across a wide swarth of virtual space … this diary will also be cross posted at Tikkun and ePluribus. Miep and I are hoping to create an active team from across the country to document, archive, and adddress the homeless problem. We are collaborating with NAEH, hope to find some airtime on a show like Angie Coiro …. and pull together a country-wide endeavor to find best practices and invent new ones. Thanks for reading and for any ideas you might have.

  1. this in orange (I had to search.)

  2. for that guy I wrote about in a comment here, here it is, that I met on Friday at the O/P Clinic here. He had 2 broken wrists (he’s one week post op) and is newly homeless as a result (sort of).

    Im open to advice. well, Its not like I myself can do much for him, but I can try to do a little research at least. And phone the social worker at the Salvation Army shelter, which is where he told me he’s “staying”.

    Its haunting me.

    The first 2 weeks, I could not feed myself, dress myself, nothing. God. we treat injured stray dogs better than what this guy can get.

  3. Hello, that iphone application exists! We just launched last week. Here is a link to our website where you can download “Catalista”: http://bit.ly/zl3pR

    Catalista for iPhone and iPod touch helps individuals find real-time, local opportunities on their mobile phones — so no matter where people are, they can always be connected to volunteering opportunities happening that day, weekend, or month near them. They can invite their friends on Facebook to volunteer, keep track of their impact, and rate their volunteering experience once they’ve done their good deed. Volunteers can choose from over 200,000 opportunities from across the United States.

    We created this application in response to Obama’s call to service and to reverse the falling volunteering rates and what the National Conference on Citizenship has coined a “civic recession”.

    I hope you like it and can help us spread the word!

    –Team Catalista

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