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Making the homeless count

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Tim, a PADS client, has been with PADS for 90 days and is currently getting his GED through McHenry County College in hopes of getting back on his feet and getting a job on an oil rig. The McHenry County Public Action to Deliver Shelter and Pioneer Center for Human Services organized its 12th annual count of the homeless individuals and families in the county. (Monica Maschak – mmaschak@shawmedia.com)

Tim’s path to homelessness has been long and arduous.

He worked in Kentucky tobacco fields when he was 8 years old. His father was a physically abusive alcoholic who moved Tim’s family 11 times in one year. Tim left home at 14.

Tim now is 52 and one of the hundreds of homeless people living in McHenry County. Last week, McHenry County Public Action to Deliver Shelter and Pioneer Center for Human Services organized a “point-in-time” survey to identify how many homeless individuals live in the county. The numbers from the 12th annual survey still are being tallied.

Tim has spent the past 90 days with PADS, a decision that saved his life, he said.

“I have clean clothes. I’m fed. I’m motivated,” said Tim, whose last name has been withheld at the request of PADS. “When I just about gave up, they were there. They’re the ones that made me feel human again.”

The 2012 survey found 203 homeless individuals. PADS coordinator Matthew Kostecki said he expects the number to go up this year and believes the weak economy and cold weather both play roles in an increase.

“Each year is different,” he said. “You see a different face each year. [The] last two years we’ve seen a lot of 18- to 24-year-olds. This year, we’ve seen more families come in.”

Home of the Sparrow is a transitional housing program specifically for women and children in McHenry County, and this year it expects to see a 50 percent increase in the number of homeless people it serves.

“Clearly McHenry County has a homeless person problem,” said John Jones, executive director at Home of the Sparrow. Jones said it’s important for organizations such as his to provide support programs that turn homeless people into self-sufficient members of society.

“If you don’t get to the root causes of homelessness, they’re going to be homeless again,” he said.

Part of the reason Home of the Sparrow will see an increase in homeless individuals is because it has added 13 housing units, but Debbie DeGraw, vice president of marketing and development, said that over 10 years she has seen a steady increase of homeless people in McHenry County.

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