In April 2014 James W. Lewis moved into permanent housing in
Chesapeake, Virginia and became the
inaugural Housing First client of the Virginia
Beach-based Judeo-Christian Outreach Center. His new home came with services
designed to help him remain there.
James Lewis is happy in his new home. |
Two years later Lewis calls his rescue from homelessness like
climbing into “a boat that doesn’t have holes in it. It sits me up a little taller.
I feel a little sturdier to push forward.”
Lewis, 57, is disabled by blood
clots and chronic back problems. He is a former carnival worker who spent 10
years bouncing between Hampton Roads homeless shelters and sleeping outdoors.
JCOC’s Housing First program, largely funded by Hampton
Roads Community Foundation donors, alters the traditional practice of moving
homeless people into crowded shelters and transitional housing while requiring
them to take courses and receive counseling before getting permanent housing.
A federally mandated shift to “Housing First in 2009 was a
big culture change for us,” says Todd A.J. Walker, JCOC executive director. “Other
services are still important, but housing is the biggest. We now attack that animal
at the beginning. We do other assessments and services once someone’s in a
stable [housing] situation.”
Lewis calls Fatima Tomlin 'superwoman.' |
Fatima Tomlin, a JCOC case manager, helped Lewis
find his new home, adopt good budgeting habits and cover initial costs. Lewis
now lives in an immaculate, furnished home in a neighborhood near a supermarket
and is happy to be there.
JCOC is among 10 Hampton Roads nonprofits receiving more than $4.9 million in grants provided by Hampton Roads Community Foundation donors to help end homelessness in southeastern Virginia.