Room in the Inn Open House & Ribbon Cutting 9-9-10

THE CELEBRATION
On September 9, 2010, Room in the Inn will officially open the doors of its new campus in downtown Nashville.

We invite you to celebrate the ribbon-cutting ceremony alongside our homeless neighbors, city and state leaders and Room in the Inn's staff, volunteers, participants and friends.

And please join us throughout the afternoon for guided tours of the beautiful, spacious and state-of-the-art campus, Nashville's only single-site of services addressing homelessness.

RIBBON-CUTTING CEREMONY
11:00am

OPEN HOUSE
11:30am-6:00pm

Location: 705 Drexel Street at 8th Ave South
(parking available in lot adjacent to the new facility and in spaces along Drexel Street.)


Join the Movement

JOIN THE MOVEMENT

In preparation for the 9-9-10 event, we extend an invitation to all of our neighbors to learn more about Room in The Inn and to join the movement to heighten awareness, get involved and, ultimately, impact our city and the lives of all of your neighbors.

Here's what you can do:

STICK 'EM UP! Watch for Room in the Inn's signature star lapel stickers, bumper stickers, pocket brochures and posters at local retailers and restaurants, then pick them up and share with your friends, family and neighbors.

CELEBRATE!  Join us for our ribbon-cutting ceremony at 11:00am on 9-9-10

TAKE A LOOK! Attend our Open House from 11:30am - 6:00pm on 9-9-10 or call to arrange a tour

PAY IT FORWARD! Send the link www.9-9-10.org to your contacts

FRIEND US! Find Room in the Inn on Facebook and Twitter, suggest us to friends and include links to 9-9-10.org in your email signature.

SHINE YOUR LIGHT! Scan this site for other ways you can support Room in the Inn

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE VISIT:

Homeless people flee to dry refuges during the flood of Tent City

Tent City homeless camp is destroyed by flooding
By Bob Smietana • THE TENNESSEAN • May 5, 2010

The embattled homeless encampment, just off of Hermitage Avenue, which has escaped several shutdown notices from Metro police, was washed away by the weekend's flooding. About 120 people were evacuated from the camp on Sunday, with the help of volunteers from local churches.
They left their few possessions behind. Most escaped with little more than the clothes on their backs. Reginald "Vegas" Watson, 45, a member of the residents council that helped organize Tent City, said the camp is uninhabitable.
The property is covered with diesel fuel from a nearby ruptured storage tank and waste from overturned portable toilets.

"We're not going back," he said. "It's not a fit place for people to live."
Watson and about 70 other residents are staying at a Red Cross shelter setup at Lipscomb University. Others are at Green Street Church of Christ and Woodbine Cumberland Presbyterian Church and other local shelters, or are staying in hotels or with friends.
A group of volunteers from local churches and homeless advocates are looking for a new temporary site for Tent City before the emergency shelters close down.
"The folks will literally have no place to go," Watson said.
Plans had been in the works to close the camp by the fall, said Clifton Harris of the Metro Homelessness Commission.
The long-term plan is to get Tent City residents into a Housing First program, where they have a permanent place to live and case management services.
"That's the permanent solution," Harris said, "but we also need a temporary solution."
Harris said that he and volunteers such as Doug Sanders from Otter Creek Church of Christ are looking for one or two acres for the new Tent City. The site has to be along a bus line, and can't be close to a school or day care. Having a water meter on the site would help as well, Sanders said.
"We don't need much beyond water," Sanders said. "We can bring in portable toilets and Dumpsters."
Otter Creek Church and other local congregations are trying to collect tents, sleeping bags and other supplies for Tent City residents.

"We're trying to give them a place to start over,'' he said.
Patricia Coronado, a 23-year-old who lived at the homeless camp, said she will not go to the new location. "I won't go back to living in a tent," she said, but she doesn't know what she's going to do.
Watson said that former Tent City residents are nervous and worried about the future. For now, he and other members of the residents council are trying to keep in touch by cell phone with Tent City residents who are scattered at various shelters.
But he believes things will work out, pointing to the biblical story of the flood.
"God sent that flood to cleanse things and to make way for something better," he said. "I'm hoping for something better."
Contact Bob Smietana at 615-59-8228 or bsmietana@tennessean.com.

Homeless Vets

Facts about Homeless Veterans
1 out of every 4 homeless men (or 33%) in the United States is a veteran.
 
There are anywhere from 529,000 to 840,000 veterans who are homeless at some time during the year.
 
47% of homeless veterans are from the Vietnam era, 

15% are from the pre-Vietnam era and the remainer are from the post-Vietnam era including such conflicts as Granada, Panama, Lebanon, the Gulf War, the military's anti-drug efforts in South America and the current Iraq War.
 
67% served 3 years or more.
 
89% received honorable discharges.
 
76% experience alcohol, drug, or mental health problems. 
    NASHVILLLE's HOMELESS VET: 
    The most recent homeless count, conducted by the city of Nashville in January 2009, found 2,157 homeless people in Davidson County. The count did not include homeless in the surrounding counties who also come to Operation Stand Down Nashville for services. With approximately 30% of the homeless being veterans, at least 647 veterans are homeless in Nashville/Davidson County, with more in the surrounding counties, on any particular night. Our unique partnership with the VA Medical Center and the VA Regional Office allows us to provide more direct, personal social services than any other agency in this area.

    No veteran should be homeless. No veteran who wants to work should be jobless. No veteran should feel hopeless. Room in the Inn is developing a program that will work with Operation Stand Down Nashville enabling more homeless vets to find a safe haven while they get back on their feet.


    Facts courtesy of Operation Stand Down

    The Face of Room In the Inn


    Room in the Inn continually looks for ways to help others deal with the issues they are faced with.  This project was meant to help illustrate all the differences and similarities from one individual to the next by allowing them to paint their own piece into the puzzle that creates all of us.

    This image will be located on the wall as a display to help open conversations between visitors, guests and residents.  Empower one another through the challenges we face and represent the uniqueness that brings us together.

    Please stop by to see this beautiful piece of art displayed within the walls at Room In the Inn.

    Guest Entrance


    The Room in the Inn logo painted at the guest entrance...

    Murals of Inspiration

    Making the best of the plywood barriers that surround our limited outdoor spaces, the Catholic Heart Workcamp painted murals for our Guest House residents to enjoy.

    1 Corinthians 13:4-8

     4Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
     8Love never fails. But where there are prophecies, they will cease; where there are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away.