Hope House’s mission is to break the cycle of domestic violence by providing safe refuge and supportive services that educate and empower those impacted by domestic violence. CaringWorks Hope House provides one-of-a-kind supportive housing for homeless men or men facing homelessness in metro Atlanta. Each year more than 130 clients call Hope House home while they move through their journey of recovery. The alumni of Hope House and other clients we serve find more than their sobriety.
Every dollar ensures that a child is off the street and able to have shelter. Hope House is proud to offer comprehensive services to survivors and their children, no matter where they are in their journey. We will work with you on an individual basis to create a plan that meets your specific needs. Domestic violence can happen to anyone, no matter their gender, age, race, ethnicity, religion, or sexuality. Hope House advocates for survivors, no matter where they are in their journey. Hope House strives to Advocate, Educate, and Empower survivors of domestic violence.
- They lived in a rear tenement in today’s SoHo neighborhood, in a building with both Irish and African American New Yorkers.
- At Hope House, we are committed to fostering an environment where people from all lived experiences and backgrounds thrive.
- However, the pressure of keeping up with rent and a life of drugs and “partying” ultimately led to bouts of homelessness and a positive HIV diagnosis in 2014.
- The alumni of Hope House and other clients we serve find more than their sobriety.
- We are grateful for the continued support of the community and for the ongoing contributions of our friends and supporters.
Loisann’s Hope House greatly appreciates the items you choose to donate from our wish list. We are grateful for the continued support of the community and for the ongoing contributions of our friends and supporters. Hope House Foundation, a 501(c)3 organization, provides services to adults with developmental disabilities exclusively in their own homes or apartments — regardless of how complex their disabilities may be. Hope House is dedicated to making sure every individual affected by domestic violence can find refuge and freedom.
Changed Lives
Explore the story of Joseph and Rachel Moore, Black New Yorkers who made their home in Lower Manhattan’s tenements in the 1860s and 1870s. Joseph Moore moves from New Jersey to Manhattan in 1857, his wife Rachel from Kingston, New York in the same decade. They lived in a rear tenement in today’s SoHo neighborhood, in a building with both Irish and African American New Yorkers. By getting involved in the Junior Ambassador program you can help end the cycle of homelessness. We are in need of food, paper products, cleaning supplies, medicines, and gift cards.
Advocate, Educate, Empower Model
The Hope House offers person centered, trauma informed evidenced based treatment for women with substance use and mental health disorders. During their stay at The Hope House, residents participate in individual and group counseling and 12 Step programs. We offer treatment that transitions from inpatient to intensive outpatient to aftercare over a nine to twelve month period. Treatment includes family education, medication management, peer support services, assistance with transitional housing, and recovery-oriented social and recreational activities. Hope House’s Mission is to break the cycle of domestic violence by providing safe refuge and supportive services that educate and empower those impacted by domestic violence. Hope House will advocate social change that protects and engenders a person’s right to live a life free of abuse.
Do you need Shelter?
For more than two decades, Loisann was employed by Upward Bound, a government program that helps poor and minority students pursue a college experience. She was a counselor to the teens who wanted to attend college, helping them identify loans, fill out applications, and proof their writing samples. Hope House is honored to bear the name of a compassionate, kind social worker who began her life in Fredericksburg. Executive Director Neil Campbell from the Georgia Council on Substance Abuse shares her perspective on CaringWorks programs.
Pride Month is celebrated every June as a tribute to those who were involved in the Stonewall Riots. Pride Month isa month-long celebration that recognizes the LGBTQ+ community and their contributions to society. It is a time to acknowledge the challenges faced by this community and to stand in solidarity with their fight for equality, acceptance, and human rights.
Already this year we are on track to surpass these numbers, and as the need has grown, so has Loisann’s Hope House. We recently added another home to our campus, allowing us to house 19 families in need of emergency shelter. I would like to continue working on my speech so I can fix the damage from my stroke. Eventually I want to open my own treatment program for people affected by HIV/substance abuse. I would also like to chair meetings at N.A., which is something I started doing at Hope House before my stroke. At the age of 16, he revealed his sexuality to his mother and she made him leave the house.
Educate
With your help, we can build a brighter future for those impacted by abuse. In the early 1900s, conditions in tenements and factories inspired critical debates about life in cities. Trace this period of high immigration and political change through the stories of the Rogarshevsky and the Baldizzi families. Through comprehensive services, Hope House provides survivors with the resources needed to get to safety. On this tour, learn about the architects, artists and everyday people who influenced the design and use of Hope House Boston Review the neighborhood’s buildings and shaped the streetscape of you see today.
He was already abusing substances and that led to a 25 year journey of homelessness. While washing dishes and with housing help from his aunt, he obtained an apartment. However, the pressure of keeping up with rent and a life of drugs and “partying” ultimately led to bouts of homelessness and a positive HIV diagnosis in 2014. Some beds are reserved for emergency housing, however, the majority are dedicated to men who are rebuilding their lives through CaringWorks’ residential treatment and transitional housing programs. But talk to those people today, and they’ll tell you how their children have not just succeeded, but blossomed.