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Article History BALTIMORE (Map, News) - In Baltimore County, the homeless will just have to find some new place to sleep. A doorway maybe, or some nice spot beneath a bridge. Yeah, the children will like that. They can lull themselves to sleep each night to the soothing sounds of 18-wheelers backfiring just above their little heads.
That’s the dispiriting news about Sarah’s Hope today. They’re closing the Franklin Square Boulevard homeless shelter June 30. The Examiner published a few pieces about Sarah’s Hope last winter because it touched the heart how so many people — men, women, lots of children, families devastated by the cruel, modern economy — found a temporary home of such warmth and caring in a difficult season.
The shelter wasn’t fancy. About 150 people at a time could stay there. They shared three residential areas and most slept on mats on the floor, though a few had cots they’d brought from places where they’d previously lived.
As you walked around the shelter, you saw no slackers. There were women sitting on folding chairs with thousand-yard stares. How would they get everyone through such an awful time? There were men sitting with children on their laps, looking humiliated because they thought they had let their families down. They were white and black, and some still had jobs. But the jobs didn’t pay enough to keep up with the rent.
And there were dozens of kids all over the place.
For as long as they needed it, Sarah’s Hope offered the tiniest bit of security in their lives. They knew they’d have a few meals each day and a warm place to sleep. The shelter was run by St. Vincent de Paul since 2002, part of a cooperative effort by 50 religious congregations of different denominations to look after those in trouble — a place, said Executive Director John Schiavone, “built upon principles of true collaboration with the faith community.”
The other day, though, Schiavone sent a letter informing everyone that the end is near. Sarah’s Hope closes at the end of June. This follows months of administrative tension that, in a sane world, should have nothing to do with the simple act of giving shelter to people in need.
“The Baltimore County Office of Community Conservation has elected not to renew its contract with St. Vincent de Paul,” Schiavone wrote. The county owns the building that houses Sarah’s Hope, and expects control over operations. St. Vincent de Paul says it should run the place.
Sarah’s Hope was supported by about $365,000 in various government funding — added to by about $235,000 in individual, church and foundation funding, plus about $400,000 a year of in-kind funding.
The results were pretty inspiring: A range of services beyond “a mat and a meal.” There were parenting and life-skills classes, pre-school activities, health workshops, job counseling, housing seminars, clothing distribution, summer camp through the Camp St. Vincent de Paul program. And there were services to help people get back to permanent housing.
In his letter, Schiavone wrote, “We designed a plan for bunk beds that met the county’s occupancy goals, and even raised all of the necessary funds — in excess of $100,000. Despite these efforts, it took almost a year for the county to respond by painting the walls, making other needed repairs, and securing the small amount of additional space necessary to implement our bunk bed plan.
“We were just about to begin installing bunk beds and furnishing the children’s room when we received word of [the county’s] reversal of direction and termination of our contract. … You may be wondering why,” Schiavone wrote. “So are we.”
Historically, Baltimore County has seen itself as boss of the shelter, and hired a year-to-year contractor to operate the place. This was never what St. Vincent de Paul had in mind.
“It may have been acceptable to previous shelter providers,” said Schiavone, “but it doesn’t allow for investment, ownership and collaboration with others in the provision of services, and it is not how we operate at St. Vincent de Paul.”
In other words, while the county expected more direct control over operations, Schiavone thought this limited his ability to make decisions, to establish policies and procedures. Compromise was not easy. County officials were not happy. Then came their decision to terminate.
So Schiavone has scheduled a May 15 meeting, 6 p.m. at Trinity Church on Allegheny Avenue in Towson, for eleventh-hour efforts to save Sarah’s Hope.
Either that, or the homeless will have to look elsewhere. Maybe some nice abandoned house. Or a doorway somewhere. Or beneath some bridge with the trucks rumbling overhead.
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Examiner Reader said:
Regarding Blachley - Some years ago when both Blach and I were at BGE I received a speeding ticket out in Western Maryland (in a Company Car and I was part of Management). Blach and I went to Hagerstown to contest the ticket. When our turn came Blach pleaded me Not Guilty. The Judge said "fine but if I find you guilty the fine will be doubled". Blach immediatly said 'in that case your honor we plead guilty" To me Blach will always be Algonquin J Calhoun. One last story. Blach and his boss didn't get along well but he would occasionly eat lunch with Blach the General Council and myself. One day he wasn't there and I asked Blach about it. He said "He's out walking his Rat" Great guy and I miss his company. If he ever sees this he will know from whence it came.
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Examiner Reader said:
Leo Bretholz is a most impressive man and speaker. His book, written with your assistance, Michael, is a most profound history of the Holocaust and Leo's incredible story of survival. It should be required reading in every Maryland high school. --JoAnn Macdonald, Joppa
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Examiner Reader said:
I couldn't agree more with Michael Olesker. All communities need heroes to inspire their young people and to instill pride in their adults. Leadership and accomplishment need public recognition. If not for the unselfish work of a local sculptor, Fred Kail, who persevered for years to bring John Unitas' bronze to its rightful place at the stadium, we wouldn't have that! Team owners and so-called 'club organizations' should be taking the lead in efforts to celebrate their former players...not looking for excuses to NOT fund such worthwhile projects. Ticket prices and profit margins seem to grow and in the process limit the public's participation. Perhaps it's time to give something tangible back. Jeanne Cohen, Baltimore
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Nestor Aparicio said:
Amen, Michael...where is the common sense of this city? It's pretty sad when the people who reaped the benefits and joy of the work of Schaefer and Brooksie can't see fit to honor them...
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Examiner Reader said:
You and the Sun weren't so fond of "Du" Burns when he was running for Mayor...I recall a great deal of lies written about the man you now say is so wonderful. "Du" was a great Mayor and would have never taken the City to the Low that Schmoke did.
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Examiner Reader said:
Where is Jim Smith, County Executive and Martin OweMalley on this. It is completely unacceptable for them to allow men, women, and children to sleep out in the cold. Way to go Jim Smith and Martin OweMalley!! They must not need the homeless vote and or cannot appoint a relative to a high paying administrators position to supervise this problem
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Examiner Reader said:
This article is a one-sided, journalistic disaster. Olesker clearly failed to consult anyone outside of St. Vincent de Paul regarding the shelter and the reasons for this change. There were some improvements made by St. V de P, but they were far outweighed by their many failures in the opinion of many community members. As a community member of Baltimore County who is very concerned with the issue of homelessness, it was shocking when St. V de P stopped serving single women at Sarahs Hope, turning them away with no emergency shelter in Baltimore County. Not a single person from the Office of Community Conservation is even referenced in the article to give them a chance the explain their side of the story. The Office of Community Conservation does not make these decisions lightly. To imply that some desire for control was the reason for this decision is absurd and looks to me like attempt to deflect attention from the gross failures of St. V de P in its time at the shelter.
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Examiner Reader said:
before you make such a rediculous statement you might want to check your facts about the reasons this happened.
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Independent Marylander said:
Olesker, who are you trying to convince? Race will always be the 800lb. elephant in the room until a true dialogue can take place where people, black & white, can really say what is on their mind without having to worry about how they are labeled. For black or white folks to bottle up the anger, or worse, pretend it isn't there is counter-productive. Acknowledge there is animosity, anger, distrust, even hatred, then let's figure how to address the problem. Of course, the sensationalist media would not be privy to this dialogue.
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Examiner Reader said:
Race is never an issue WHEN the scenerio is white victim of crime committed by blacks! But if one were to simply reverse the races in the ALLEGED CRIMES (remember it is Olesker writing the story, so we dont know if these incidents ever actually happened) I bet race would be the central issue and Olesker would have a somewhat different slant to his article. Most likely calling for an end to racism. Olesker even reminded us of possible white racism of 40 years ago, but still refuses to think black racism is present in the incidents of black on white crime he wrote the story about. Why didnt Olesker include exactly what the 5 blacks were saying as they "taunted" the white man before punching him for no reason. They were most likely calling him a white this and a white that! But that wouldnt fit into the premise of Oleskers article The tax payers of Canton should "vote with their feet" if the city will not hear their concerns and forces this violent to school to remain open.
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Examiner Reader said:
You dont think it is about race.... its a class thing. Well then it is about race. Stop lying and call it what it is. Look at the murder rate... black on black. Look at the school problem. Turn on your TV and read the papers - and you will finally open your eyes.
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CADET said:
ridiculing the military itself anyway. Furthermore, I don't find someone who once had allegations, and was fired over them, of plagiarism to be a reliable opinion source. Get your facts straight sir, and shut up otherwise. On another note, every single cadet who lives and works with these athletes, whether they are on a sports team or not, realizes the sacrifice that it is even to attend a military school for four years and we couldn't be happier to see our brothers in arms get an opportunity like this and inspire all of us to new heights. It made me sad to read Olesker's total drivel.
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Examiner Reader said:
I love Lil Melvin, he has counseled me many times. Titi
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Examiner Reader said:
Hardly seems that two decades have passed since my great-aunt Mary (Avara) died. Thank you for resurrecting her in our minds and hearts. Her tenure on the Censor Board in Baltimore is legend in our family. She may never have understood what John Waters was trying to do but she did everything with a passion and spirit that her spunk must have been something that even Mr Waters would have admired. Her total dedication and determination to protect the youth of her era from the evils and filth of a sexual revolution were futile and yet they are the characteristics that made her a permanent piece of Bawlmer legend as surely as John Waters hisself. Hats off to you great-aunt Mary for following your beliefs in the face of such wanton comedy. Linda Robertson
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perryhallguy said:
love it. what happened to wild bill anyway?
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Examiner Reader said:
amen
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Examiner Reader said:
Karl Marx said that religion is the opiate of the masses.
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Examiner Reader said:
wish people felt the same passion about to 40,000 killed and over 2 million injured every year in car crashes
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the sludgeman said:
what are the address of the lawns where the sludge was applied? If the sludge is so safe and can be bought at home depot , why the half-millon dollars for the study? What is a food coupon?
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Rocko the Magnificent said:
O'Malley "had the wonderful luxury of sitting back and doing nothing to help us" with the enormous BGE rate hike with which he promised he was going to help us. Don't you love turning the hypocritical politicians own words against them! I know that I do.
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Examiner Reader said:
Columbia: high taxes, small plots of land, pregnant teens, people praising convicted criminals of being good people, people claiming there aren't jobs. I don't want my kids growing up in that riff raff.
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Columbia said:
I have live in Columbia for 11 years and I knew Bryan Adams very well....The situation with him is very said he just lost his son not to long ago in Aug'2007, Bryan Loved his son very much I even went to school and college with he went to HCC all he kept saying is im just trying to make it for my son... and when i got pregnant he was there for me and told me everything was going to be alright ) and I love him for that and I know he was going thur sumthing and i just wish that he could of got a chance to gt back on his feet from his son death but of course you could never get over something like because that was a gift from god.
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Blackman 2 said:
From the thirties till the seventies an experiment on African American men took place. African American men infected with Syphilis were observed so that scientist could track how the disease progressed in Blacks. This experiment took place even after a cure was found which was not made available to the men. It would be nice to believe that the racism that would lead scientist to experiment on African Americans has dissipated, however this is not the case. In East St. Louis and Baltimore the federal government experimented with a sludge made of human waste as a tool for limiting lead exposure. The neighborhoods used in the experiment were primarily African American. Full disclosure of what was in the sludge used on lawns was not made. Were it not for the freedom of information act we would not know what took place. Vigilance is the price for freedom and equality. We must always be on guard against those who would take advantage of the poor and disenfranchised. We must also focus on tho
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Examiner Reader said:
These children live in a culture thick with attitudes of victimhood and hopelessness, raised by single parents with bad attitudes, tuned into violent music performed by people with bad attitudes (or found that adopting a bad attitude sells), so-called leaders who promote victimhood and agression as legitimate responses to perceived injustice (even when there isn't any e.g. the Tawana Bradley and the Duke lacrosse team affairs); in short, a culture in denial. Major contributing culprits in are folks like Jesse Jackson, Julian Bond, Jerimiah Wright, Al Sharpton, Charlie Rangel, and local NAACP officials who disappear when things like this happen when they should be out there promoting self-relaince, assumption of personal reponsibility, the value of learning, the importance of being responsible parents. Bill Cosby is one of the few voices to be heard and he has been marginalized by the so-called leaders and the main-stream media. There's not much hope as long as this scenerio contin
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Examiner Reader said:
I say leave the kids behind Shiela. If the kids don't want to learn they are not going to, school is boring to them, I know it was to me I went because my parents made me. Kids see their parents with GED's and living off welfare and surviving, so they feel it's ok to do as well. Stop being so nice to the people, our tax dollars go to lazy people who don't want jobs and want free money because they don't want a job that illegal immigrants are doing. That sets a really good example. And kids are influenced by lots or propaganda out there like movies, music videos, and mainly their peers. If something isn't cool, guess what? they probably aren't going to want to do it. And then you have the Upper-class rich people who give their kids everything they want money, cars, whatever. Their mentality is my parents will buy me a new one, or get it for me. Imagine what that does to someone knowing that get something at the drop of a hat. What are they going to do when the money runs out o
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baltimoron said:
Afraid in Columbia? Give me a break! I grew up in Wilde Lake and Harpers Choice and those areas aren't the least bit dangerous. The Mall? The worst thing that happens there is a bit of shoplifting, and that one stabbing there about a year ago. Columbia is a great area, but maybe I am just too used to Baltimore now that I have been living here for a few years.
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Examiner Reader said:
Mr. Olesker, it's sad to say but there are many areas in Columbia which I avoid. I live in Clary's Forest but do not shop or go near the Harper's Choice or Wilde Lake Village centers. For groceries, gas, etc., I drive to the Ellicott City area along Route 40. When going to the Columbia Mall, I do so in the morning when the stores first open because going later in the day when the school day is over is very dangerous. Need I say more?
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Examiner Reader said:
The trash problem and the dirty City has been around for years. All you get from the officials is words and no action. Get the trucks and sweepers out of downtown and back into the neighborhoods. Time to bring bank the cans on wheels with sweepers. 3-4 guys on a truck doing nothing. The they are to busy taking there trucks to the bank or markets on tax payer time.
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Examiner Reader said:
Both my children have listen to old radio shows on CD since they were old enough to listen. They are now in there early teens , they are still listening to these shows each night to fall asleeep to... These shows are now on there I-pods. These shows will live forever.
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Examiner Reader said:
When you let yourself become the left wing PR vehicle for any liberal cause or politician you lose credibility with the viewing public in spite of how easily the viewing public is persuaded. WE are stupid and lack critical thinking skills, just not that stupid. The print newsapapers are not far behind. Both venues spend their integrity on "making up" the news instead of reporting it.
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Examiner Reader said:
The viewers will not come back and they will not make another dime, because the TV news is hanging itself. Local is Legislative, but not foe the pubs, They cant see dems are pubs and pubs are dems on the local level. We are all just human regardless of class and race, we want safety, health, a roof and to eat good food.
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Examiner Reader said:
The problem with the local tv stations is that they tend to go beyond what they're suppose to be doing. As far as the national and international news, that is available any time of the day or night. What would be correct for the local tv stations to do is to do away, first of all, with weather reports every five minutes. The weather people are on more than the news anchors. The news anchors would do everyone a favor if they restrained themselves and concentrated strictly on local news such as the legislature, the Baltimore City and county councils in the state, all criminal activities, fires, etc., etc. In this day and age, we don't need a bunch of local telecasters giving us the world news, which we already know. We want hard core local news without getting a weather report every five minutes. Their viewers will come back if they do that.
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Examiner Reader said:
Well Mike, sounds like it's time for you to retire and start watching Fox!
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Examiner Reader said:
Consider the source of this piece, folks. Mike's a guy that doens't let the facts get in the way of his "stories".
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Examiner Reader said:
You cant be that naive, can you? It has been proven progressives such as yourself only tolerate other progressives and therefore you never hear an opinion different from your own. You crack me up Olesker, you were caught reporting falsehoods as fact for a paper that reports their "vision" of the news instead of simply letting the facts dictate the story. Local television news is just as biased as your old newspaper when it comes to their reporting, they can barely give the, who, what , when, where, and why accurately. Let alone offering the straight story. Now you bemoan the demise of newspapers and TV news. You and your ilk are the very reason for its demise. Try being professional when writing and leave you personal biases out of your articles. The public sees through you elitists in the media and has grown tired of the slanted reporting. We simply want the facts, and not the facts as filtered by agenda driven journalists.
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Examiner Reader said:
Do your job Olesker
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Examiner Reader said:
Olesker, is there any truth in this article, or are you still making things up and attributing them as facts to "prove" the angle you wish to push.
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lrlmc said:
Once again Olesker you show how arrogant you are. You have the nerve to say at the end of your trash article exactly what McCain's pain SHOULD say. Once and for all Olesker SHUT UP. You were wrong at the other paper and you are wrong at this paper. You are part of the reason that I stopped reading the other paper, and I may well stop reading this one because you are such and arrogant ass. You build the man up in the first part of your rant so the reader actually believes that you have a micron of respect for those who fought for your right to rant in the first place. Then, just like the VC, you sneak in with the disrespectful and maddeneing assertion that you know better than the veterans themselves. You know what a former POW's pain should stand for ? Now you are not only smarter than everybody else, but you also have gained a "journalist's" version of ESP. Do yourself a favor and limit your opinions to Little Melvin the drug dealer and leave heroes like McCain and Dole alone.
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EXAMINER READER said:
Long live the 4th estate.
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Examiner Reader said:
how are the neocommie going to handle someone who acyually served in the military and is a so called hero,since they are all CHICKENHAWKS. what are they going to talk about, the war on drugs? and how to loose it,since it employees so many of them.
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Larry Harris said:
Bet nobody remembers The Lone Ranger had a nephew named Dan, whose horse was named Victor!
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