From the TC Record Eagle - 15 September 2014 -
CFS to absorb program
BY SARAH ELMS selms@record-eagle.com |
Posted: Sunday, September 14, 2014 11:45 pm
TRAVERSE CITY — Child and Family Services of Northwestern
Michigan will take on a local effort that provides shelter and support
for high school students who are unable to live at home.
Catholic Human Services, Inc., began the Host Homes program 10 years ago and is passing the torch in October.
Marybeth
Novak, Catholic Human Services’ prevention programs coordinator, has
been at the program’s helm since its inception. She said it targets
teens who want to get out of an unstable home life without dropping out
of school.
The program places teens in safe homes with adult
supervision through graduation. Novak is still totaling the numbers but
said at least 170 teens in the five-county area benefited from Host
Homes in the last decade.
“We worked with good kids who were
coming away from troubled backgrounds and needed that stability and
support to get them through high school,” she said.
The program is
entirely funded through local grants, but it’s become increasingly
difficult for Catholic Human Services to sustain.
Novak is gearing
up for retirement in the next year or two, and she wants to make sure
Host Homes is in good hands before she leaves.
“Our coffers were
getting very, very empty, and it just seemed like a good time all the
way around,” she said of the change. “I couldn’t have come up with money
to start this year.”
Child and Family Services this year absorbed
Third Level Crisis Intervention Center and now works with youth in the
foster care system as well as with homeless and runaway youth who stay
in the Pete’s Place shelter.
Courtney Russell, who will supervise the Host Homes program at CFS, said it makes sense to add it to the mix.
“It’s
a really good fit because we have a whole spectrum of services that are
put in place to support the youth in our communities,” she said. “It’s a
middle-ground support service to help youth stay in a family
environment to support them to continue their educational goals and grow
into a healthy adult.”
Russell said CFS officials will continue
to apply for local grant funding to support Host Homes, and they may be
able to obtain some state funding down the road.
What’s most important to both organizations is that the region’s struggling youth have a safe place to go.
“I
can’t thank the people who supported this program since its development
enough,” Novak said. “In my professional career, it’s probably the most
fulfilling thing I’ve ever done.”
Click here for link - subscription may be required.
No comments:
Post a Comment