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OHIO WEATHER

Program to connect Short North homeless to social services expands


The Short North Alliance and Southeast Healthcare have expanded support services to the neighborhood's homeless to five days a week.

A pilot program to provide social services to homeless people in Columbus’ Short North is expanding to five days a week beginning Thursday.

The effort by the Short North Alliance and Southeast Healthcare began as a two-day-a-week pilot program in August and then was stretched to three days a week in October, with teams linking people with emergency housing, clothes, food, health and mental health care, and substance abuse programs, said Betsy Pandora, executive director of the Short North Alliance.

The five-day-a-week program will last a year, she said.

“There is an incredible need we’ve been experiencing, individuals experiencing hard times and challenges,” Pandora said.

Rodney Sharp, 64, sits with a hot beverage inside the warming shelter for homeless at Broad Street United Methodist Church. The shelter is currently open during the day from Mondays through Fridays but will switch to a 24/7 operation beginning Dec. 15 and remain that way through March.

Meanwhile, a Downtown warming center for homeless people has been opened since Nov. 1 at the Broad Street United Methodist Church, the third winter for the center at 501 E. Broad St.

Josh Posten of the Columbus Coalition for the Homeless, which provides services in the church’s gym, said more than 50 people were served Thanksgiving dinner, with “lots and lots of food,” including six turkeys.



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