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Making the homeless count

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McHenry County PADS, like Home of the Sparrow, prides itself in being an organization that provides more than just shelter. It serves hundreds of people a year with emergency and transitional housing, psychiatric care, addiction recovery care and counseling services.

“McHenry County PADS is not a shelter,” Kostecki said. “It has everything to offer someone to get out of homelessness. People hear about PADS and think it’s just a homeless shelter. We go to extremes to help a person get out of homelessness.”

There is room for 34 people to sleep at the PADS shelter at 14411 Kishwaukee Valley Road in Woodstock.

“Sleeping rooms are a case-by-case situation,” McHenry County PADS caseworker Melissa O’Donnell said. “We try to do work with families.”

McHenry County PADS focuses on families because other locations aren’t as family-friendly. PADS partners with several churches in McHenry County to provide additional housing for homeless individuals, some of which – for safety concerns – don’t allow women and children.

“If a family shows up, we try to help them and move them to a safer environment,” said Kathy Thompson, co-administrator at Cary United Methodist Church.

The church, which opens its doors Saturday nights for homeless individuals, can at times get rowdy because of people who are alcoholics or have a mental illness, Thompson said. The church will not allow drinking in the building and will not let people stay who smell as though they have been drinking.

Cary United Methodist averages 50 homeless people a night, a number that has increased over the past two years, Thompson said.

When numbers are released for the 2013 point-in-time survey, they likely won’t reflect the actual number of homeless people in McHenry County.

The numbers won’t account for young adults who are “couch surfing, the young mothers staying in a friend’s basement or others who are missed because they choose not to use the services of PADS or other shelters,” DeGraw said.

For Tim, PADS has given him a second chance at life. He said he is close to landing a job, and he has been enrolled in classes at McHenry County College to get his GED. From there, Tim said he hopes to get a job as an underwater welder on an offshore oil platform.


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