To Get Involved:

Sister Jose Women’s Center is looking for female volunteers to cook, serve meals or keep a look out at night. To volunteer call their operations coordinator Penny Buckley at 909-3905, email admin@sisterjose.org or just stop by at 1050 S. Park Ave. There are new-volunteer orientations scheduled for August 8 from 5:30 to 7 p.m. and August 26 from 10 to 11:30 a.m. For more info go to sisterjose.org.

Bettie Cochran sits in the main room of Sister Jose Women’s Center and runs her pink nails through her long red hair. After a night’s sleep at the homeless shelter and a good breakfast, she’s excited to spend the day working at the Pima Animal Care Center, as part of the Tucson Homeless Work Program, or HWP.

HWP started last December and pays people experiencing homelessness $10 an hour on-the-spot cash to clean up streets and neighborhoods for five hours a day, saving the taxpayers money and giving a boost to one of Tucson’s most vulnerable communities.

The six women about to head to PACC eat breakfast and chat, excited about the day of work ahead. It’s the second week the women’s shelter and PACC have participated in HWP. For most of these women, it’s their first time in the program, as there are more people who want to participate than positions.

This month, the program expanded from two days a week to three, accommodating more participants across the program. Six people can work a day, and each person can work two days a month, earning up to $600 tax free in a year.

Cochran participated in the program once before, through the Salvation Army, one of three shelters who selects participants. Three weeks ago, she spent the day picking trash up off the street.

“I really needed the money,” she says. “I don’t drink. I don’t drive. I don’t smoke cigarettes. So I live off of it really slowly.”

Cochran is a recovering addict, with five years clean. She spends her money on basics like hygiene products and batteries for her radio. She also spent $15 on her nails.

Penny Buckley, Sister Jose’s operations coordinator, says spending money on something expendable like a manicure helps the women feel human again.

“Maybe they’ll go and buy a really nice meal because that’s what they used to do. It’s a reminder of who you used to be before this happened to you,” she says. “Who knows what that did to her feelings as a human and as a woman.”

The main reason women end up homeless is fleeing domestic violence. A lack of affordable housing perpetuates homelessness in men and women. Working again helps the women remember who they really are, Buckley says.

“Some of them are artists, they’re musicians, they’re caretakers—they had lives before this happened,” she says. “This program is not going to help anybody get off the street, but it’s going to give them a sense of purpose, a reminder that they can work.”

And six months of HWP, started by Tucson City Council’s Ward 5, suggests that a renewed sense of purpose may contribute to finding regular work and getting off the streets.

As of June, 166 people participated in the program. Seventeen have since found housing, and 20 have found other employment.

The program initiated with $25,000 each from the City of Tucson and Pima County, which was already allocated for street cleanup. HSL Properties matched that with an additional $50,000. And Cox Communications, Southwest Gas, Tucson Medical Center and Wal-Mart all made donations amounting to a combined $20,500.

Almost all of the money goes directly to the workers. The program, run by Old Pueblo Community Services, only has one expense: a driver to take participants to the work sites, according to Director of Development at Old Pueblo Nancy Jones. Other expenses are provided by partnering organizations.

Sister Jose, Salvation Army and Primavera Foundation provide shelter the night before the work. El Rio Health provides medical exams the day before to make sure participants are physically able to work outdoors. Assurance Behavioral HealthCare provides transportation. And Caridad Community Kitchen provides lunches.

Cenpatico Integrated Care contributed $58,000-worth of staff time. One portion of that is for a case manager from Catholic Community Services who connects participants with services such as health insurance, food stamps, work training, employment programs and housing.

“There are multiple goals with this program,” Jones says. “One is to give people meaningful work, and that helps build self esteem and self confidence, and elevate their desire to do more for themselves in their lives.” The other goals are connecting them with support services and immediate cash for necessities.

As of June, HWP participants had cleared 37,000 pounds of trash from 101 locations, including 55 miles of roadway. And according to the Ward 5 office, this was accomplished at “a fraction of the cost of traditional means.”

Out at the animal shelter, the women fold and wash towels and blankets used on the animals. They find ways to stay busy when there are lulls in laundry. A couple of them, including Ramonia Hargrett, ask about job openings at PACC.

The 53-year-old exudes positivity despite being homeless for a year. She usually sleeps at friends’ houses or in a box at a hidden spot she know of. She says she’s a licensed massage therapist, but missing her front teeth has made working in that field hard.

“I have a smile barrier. That puts people off,” Hargrett says, grinning. “I’m in circumstantial situations. I didn’t dig myself a hole, but I’m in a hole that I can’t get out of.”

She also worked as a cook for 20 years, but after breaking both her wrists four years ago, it’s hard for her to lift heavy pots. But she says she’s still very capable and wants to work. She plans on putting the money she’ll make at PACC into her bank account, which is currently overdrawn.

“I have a lot of things going for me, I just don’t have the place that I need,” she says. “The opportunity to do this work program is an awesome thing, especially for those who need it and want it.”

8 replies on “Homeless Program Working”

  1. I think this program would be even more effective if they paid these folks a similar wage to what they would pay the city workers. How is it this can cost a fraction of the price it should?? Seems like they could be taking advantage of an already disadvantaged population.

  2. They also deserve full benefits and a pension plan. Wait a minute nobody was cleaning the streets before except volunteers that payed taxes.

  3. Does this program provide an opportunity to get job training that would eventually lead to a real job with one of the sponsoring businesses or entities? HSL Properties, the COT, Pima County, Cox, Wal-Mart, etc have an obligation to do more than this if they really want to have a positive impact on the homeless problem in our community. Without job training and a road map to get these people out of shelters this is just a band aid at best and enabling at worst. This might be a good first step but it’s going to leaps and bounds for us to get out the mud, so what is the next step? Is there a plan?

  4. It is interesting how an effort, which has been in existence for only six months it getting bashed by both left and right.

    The Tucson Homeless Work Program’s purpose is to give those who are homeless, the opportunity to get housing, medical help, job training through Sullivan Jackson and other programs that offer this. The point of the program is to connect those who are homeless and want assistance to these programs and services. The two people with the program, work with those taking part to see what services they need and direct them to those providers.

    The article and report stated that 20 people are going through Sullivan Jackson for job training.

    The Tucson Homeless Work Program is a first step.

    The Tucson Homeless Work Program is not a government program, so it will need the support of businesses and the community, which will now have the Tucson Change Movement, with the parking meters and online website, tucsonchange.org, that people can make a contribution.

    Cenpatico, El Rio Health, Assurance, Catholic Community Services and Old Pueblo Community Services, and St. Anthony’s Presbyterian Church are covering their costs for this program. It is a collaboration.

    Nobody is being taken advantage of. This gives an opportunity for those who are homeless to work, get some money in their pocket and get the help that they need, if they choose so.

    This has been in the news prior to this article and yet these comments.

    Getting the homeless housing and services is the point of this program. Too bad it has been missed by the commentors so far who allegedly read this article.

  5. I read it Dan.

    “The program initiated with $25,000 each from the City of Tucson and Pima County”

    There was a day when that was called government funding.

  6. To start the program Eliza and the other donations to fund in the following years plus the Tucson Change Movement. Which had been previously reported. Like I said bashing from the left and the right.

  7. @HumanBean
    Or maybe HSL Properties, the COT, Pima County, Cox, Wal-Mart, etc. should HIRE these people for permanent jobs.

  8. @SonoranWinds,

    That was my point but I guess I did not make it clear enough 🙂 It would be great if these orgs and businesses gave more than tax deductible donations and actually pony’d up to provided job training AND jobs. Maybe they are and it was missed in this coverage.

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