What’s next? You need to get an ID but have no idea where to start. You need new clothes to wear. You want to look for work, but what phone number should you list on your resume? Where can you get a phone? With so many things to accomplish over the next few weeks, you could use some help from someone who knows how to navigate the systems. Someone handed you a flyer this morning for JEVS Human Services. If they’re open on a Saturday, maybe they can help.
If you had to prioritize housing, medical care, and employment in your first few weeks back from incarceration, what would you focus on first and why?
What’s next? You need to get an ID but have no idea where to start. You need new clothes to wear. You want to look for work, but what phone number should you list on your resume? Where can you get a phone? With so many things to accomplish over the next few weeks, you could use some help from someone who knows how to navigate the systems. Someone handed you a flyer this morning for JEVS Human Services. If they’re open on a Saturday, maybe they can help.
If you had to prioritize housing, medical care, and employment in your first few weeks back from incarceration, what would you focus on first and why?
One of your first priorities is to find somewhere to sleep tonight. When you arrived back in Philadelphia, someone handed you a “Where to Turn” pamphlet in the SEPTA terminal. Take a look at the pamphlet. Does it include any information about area shelters? Because it’s a Saturday morning, your options might be limited. You don’t have a cell phone yet, so you can’t call around. Do any of the shelter options catch your eye?
Now you also realize that you’re getting hungry. Very hungry. People in your position usually have a few options. They might panhandle for spare change or a bite to eat outside of the local sandwich shop, or they might use the “Where to Turn” guide to find a local soup kitchen or food pantry. Many soup kitchens are closed on weekends. Perhaps when you arrive, you can ask the shelter if they have any suggestions.
Pick a shelter that houses men, and visit there next. Hopefully, the shelter can give you a place to stay until you are able to find a more long-term solution. Even better would be a meal to hold you over too.
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
Do you have any fears about sleeping in a shelter? What if the shelter is crowded and you have to risk heat exhaustion outside?
What would you say are the main causes of homelessness? Why?
Have you ever been inside a homeless shelter? Tell the group about your experiences.
How many more stops can you make before you need food and water?
While you are at Probation and Parole, you bump into a young man, Bill. Bill is wearing a white, cut-off t-shirt, and a coffee-stained Phillies cap. He asks you for a cigarette as you strike up a conversation. He has been in and out of the city’s shelters for the past three years. “Without a decent job,” he tells you, “it’s impossible to move forward.”
Returning citizens often say that a job is one of the first things that they look for when they are released. While you were incarcerated, you worked as much as you could. But it has been a long time since you had to pass out your resume or sit through an interview. Bill tells you that he’s been to a work program that helps returning citizens at Suburban Station. You don’t know where that is, but Bill says you “can’t miss it” and points you in the right direction.
While you are walking there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
What challenges do you think that you are going to face in finding and keeping a job?
Do you have any ideas about what jobs are most widely available to returning citizens?
You haven’t been feeling very well over the past few days and have chalked it up to anxiety and hunger. But now you have a cough. Have you been wearing a mask today? If you can find a bed, you’re going to be sleeping in a shelter tonight with maybe dozens of other men. What if they don’t let you stay because of the cough? Outreach mentioned that Project HOME gives away free COVID-19 Rapid Tests at their drop in center in the SEPTA concourse, underneath the Municipal Services Building. They might be able to help and answer a few questions, if you can find them!
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
People experiencing homlessness and returning citizens contract COVID-19 at a higher rate than the general population.
1. What are some reasons why they might be at risk?
2. Where would you go if you knew you had COVID-19 but had nowhere to sleep tonight?
3. In what other ways do you think that COVID-19 might present challenges for returning citizens?
What’s next? You need to get an ID but have no idea where to start. You need new clothes to wear. You want to look for work, but what phone number should you list on your resume? Where can you get a phone? With so many things to accomplish over the next few weeks, you could use some help from someone who knows how to navigate the systems. Someone handed you a flyer this morning for JEVS Human Services. If they’re open on a Saturday, maybe they can help.
If you had to prioritize housing, medical care, and employment in your first few weeks back from incarceration, what would you focus on first and why?
One of your first priorities is to find somewhere to sleep tonight. When you arrived back in Philadelphia, someone handed you a “Where to Turn” pamphlet in the SEPTA terminal. Take a look at the pamphlet. Does it include any information about area shelters? Because it’s a Saturday morning, your options might be limited. You don’t have a cell phone yet, so you can’t call around. Do any of the shelter options catch your eye?
Now you also realize that you’re getting hungry. Very hungry. People in your position usually have a few options. They might panhandle for spare change or a bite to eat outside of the local sandwich shop, or they might use the “Where to Turn” guide to find a local soup kitchen or food pantry. Many soup kitchens are closed on weekends. Perhaps when you arrive, you can ask the shelter if they have any suggestions.
Pick a shelter that houses men, and visit there next. Hopefully, the shelter can give you a place to stay until you are able to find a more long-term solution. Even better would be a meal to hold you over too.
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
Do you have any fears about sleeping in a shelter? What if the shelter is crowded and you have to risk heat exhaustion outside?
What would you say are the main causes of homelessness? Why?
Have you ever been inside a homeless shelter? Tell the group about your experiences.
How many more stops can you make before you need food and water?
You haven’t been feeling very well over the past few days and have chalked it up to anxiety and hunger. But now you have a cough. Have you been wearing a mask today? If you can find a bed, you’re going to be sleeping in a shelter tonight with maybe dozens of other men. What if they don’t let you stay because of the cough? Outreach mentioned that Project HOME gives away free COVID-19 Rapid Tests at their drop in center in the SEPTA concourse, underneath the Municipal Services Building. They might be able to help and answer a few questions, if you can find them!
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
People experiencing homlessness and returning citizens contract COVID-19 at a higher rate than the general population.
1. What are some reasons why they might be at risk?
2. Where would you go if you knew you had COVID-19 but had nowhere to sleep tonight?
3. In what other ways do you think that COVID-19 might present challenges for returning citizens?
You haven’t been feeling very well over the past few days and have chalked it up to anxiety and hunger. But now you have a cough. Have you been wearing a mask today? If you can find a bed, you’re going to be sleeping in a shelter tonight with maybe dozens of other men. What if they don’t let you stay because of the cough? Outreach mentioned that Project HOME gives away free COVID-19 Rapid Tests at their drop in center in the SEPTA concourse, underneath the Municipal Services Building. They might be able to help and answer a few questions, if you can find them!
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
People experiencing homlessness and returning citizens contract COVID-19 at a higher rate than the general population.
1. What are some reasons why they might be at risk?
2. Where would you go if you knew you had COVID-19 but had nowhere to sleep tonight?
3. In what other ways do you think that COVID-19 might present challenges for returning citizens?
One of your first priorities is to find somewhere to sleep tonight. When you arrived back in Philadelphia, someone handed you a “Where to Turn” pamphlet in the SEPTA terminal. Take a look at the pamphlet. Does it include any information about area shelters? Because it’s a Saturday morning, your options might be limited. You don’t have a cell phone yet, so you can’t call around. Do any of the shelter options catch your eye?
Now you also realize that you’re getting hungry. Very hungry. People in your position usually have a few options. They might panhandle for spare change or a bite to eat outside of the local sandwich shop, or they might use the “Where to Turn” guide to find a local soup kitchen or food pantry. Many soup kitchens are closed on weekends. Perhaps when you arrive, you can ask the shelter if they have any suggestions.
Pick a shelter that houses men, and visit there next. Hopefully, the shelter can give you a place to stay until you are able to find a more long-term solution. Even better would be a meal to hold you over too.
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
Do you have any fears about sleeping in a shelter? What if the shelter is crowded and you have to risk heat exhaustion outside?
What would you say are the main causes of homelessness? Why?
Have you ever been inside a homeless shelter? Tell the group about your experiences.
How many more stops can you make before you need food and water?
One of your first priorities is to find somewhere to sleep tonight. When you arrived back in Philadelphia, someone handed you a “Where to Turn” pamphlet in the SEPTA terminal. Take a look at the pamphlet. Does it include any information about area shelters? Because it’s a Saturday morning, your options might be limited. You don’t have a cell phone yet, so you can’t call around. Do any of the shelter options catch your eye?
Now you also realize that you’re getting hungry. Very hungry. People in your position usually have a few options. They might panhandle for spare change or a bite to eat outside of the local sandwich shop, or they might use the “Where to Turn” guide to find a local soup kitchen or food pantry. Many soup kitchens are closed on weekends. Perhaps when you arrive, you can ask the shelter if they have any suggestions.
Pick a shelter that houses men, and visit there next. Hopefully, the shelter can give you a place to stay until you are able to find a more long-term solution. Even better would be a meal to hold you over too.
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
Do you have any fears about sleeping in a shelter? What if the shelter is crowded and you have to risk heat exhaustion outside?
What would you say are the main causes of homelessness? Why?
Have you ever been inside a homeless shelter? Tell the group about your experiences.
How many more stops can you make before you need food and water?
Day One is over, but the challenge of reentry is only just beginning. You have found a place to sleep and eat for the next 30 days at Sunday Breakfast Rescue Mission. You connected with medical services at Project HOME’s Hub of Hope. You know where to go when it is time to check in with your P.O., and you have looked into the vocational support offered at at JEVS and CareerLink. Now it is time to rest, because you will have to take to the city streets bright and early tomorrow morning. What do you think you should work on next?
Are you prescribed any medication, and have you been taking it since your release? Do you know where you can go to find a Primary Care provider, or how you will pay for the visit? How’s your mental health? Do you have any job leads yet? Don’t let the “to-do” list overwhelm you, but understand that you still have a lot of work to do.
As you head back to the Day One Challenge reflection at Tenth Presbyterian Church, take some time to reflect upon the following questions with your group:
What surprised you the most about the Day One Challenge today? Was anything more difficult than you anticipated?
Knowing what you know now, what do you think is the greatest challenge facing returning citizens in Philadelphia?
Redemption Housing’s vision is to provide returning citizens with transitional housing, mentoring relationships, and support as they work towards independent living. If you were a resident in one of Redemption Housing’s programs, how do you think their volunteers would have been able to help you today?
You haven’t been feeling very well over the past few days and have chalked it up to anxiety and hunger. But now you have a cough. Have you been wearing a mask today? If you can find a bed, you’re going to be sleeping in a shelter tonight with maybe dozens of other men. What if they don’t let you stay because of the cough? Outreach mentioned that Project HOME gives away free COVID-19 Rapid Tests at their drop in center in the SEPTA concourse, underneath the Municipal Services Building. They might be able to help and answer a few questions, if you can find them!
While you are heading there, take some time to talk through the following questions with your group:
People experiencing homlessness and returning citizens contract COVID-19 at a higher rate than the general population.
1. What are some reasons why they might be at risk?
2. Where would you go if you knew you had COVID-19 but had nowhere to sleep tonight?
3. In what other ways do you think that COVID-19 might present challenges for returning citizens?
What’s next? You need to get an ID but have no idea where to start. You need new clothes to wear. You want to look for work, but what phone number should you list on your resume? Where can you get a phone? With so many things to accomplish over the next few weeks, you could use some help from someone who knows how to navigate the systems. Someone handed you a flyer this morning for JEVS Human Services. If they’re open on a Saturday, maybe they can help.
If you had to prioritize housing, medical care, and employment in your first few weeks back from incarceration, what would you focus on first and why?
Day One is over, but the challenge of reentry is only just beginning. You have found a place to sleep and eat for the next 30 days at Sunday Breakfast Rescue Mission. You connected with medical services at Project HOME’s Hub of Hope. You know where to go when it is time to check in with your P.O., and you have looked into the vocational support offered at at JEVS and CareerLink. Now it is time to rest, because you will have to take to the city streets bright and early tomorrow morning. What do you think you should work on next?
Are you prescribed any medication, and have you been taking it since your release? Do you know where you can go to find a Primary Care provider, or how you will pay for the visit? How’s your mental health? Do you have any job leads yet? Don’t let the “to-do” list overwhelm you, but understand that you still have a lot of work to do.
As you head back to the Day One Challenge reflection at Tenth Presbyterian Church, take some time to reflect upon the following questions with your group:
What surprised you the most about the Day One Challenge today? Was anything more difficult than you anticipated?
Knowing what you know now, what do you think is the greatest challenge facing returning citizens in Philadelphia?
Redemption Housing’s vision is to provide returning citizens with transitional housing, mentoring relationships, and support as they work towards independent living. If you were a resident in one of Redemption Housing’s programs, how do you think their volunteers would have been able to help you today?
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