Public Resources Available to Atlanta Residents During Covid-19 Precautionary Period

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Public Resources Available to Atlanta Residents During Covid-19 Precautionary Period PUBLIC RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO ATLANTA RESIDENTS DURING COVID-19 PRECAUTIONARY PERIOD SERVICE DESCRIPTION CONTACT INFO PROVIDER Coronavirus For further general information about https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov CDC Updates the coronavirus, health and safety tips, and protocol please go to the CDC website. Please continue to follow health and safety guidelines of washing hands thoroughly for 20 seconds and staying home if feeling unwell. Virus Updates For updates from APS about coronavirus https://www.atlantapublicschools.us Atlanta from APS responses, see the APS website. Public Schools Power Utility Georgia Power also will temporarily https://www.georgiapower.com/company/news- Georgia suspend residential disconnections for center/2020-articles/georgia-power-assures-customers-safe- Power the next 30 days, beginning on March and-reliable-service-will-continue-during-covid-19- 14, 2020, and will reevaluate the policy pandemic.html and timeframe as the situation develops. Free Internet Free internet for those needing to https://www.internetessentials.com Comcast access internet due to being home from Essentials school and work during virus pandemic. Residents will need to cancel after the two months if they don't wish to then pay the monthly fee of $10 + tax. Resident Service intake and case management- 404-685-4344 Atlanta Services information, referrals and connection to 404 347-5293 Housing community services [email protected] · Safety and reassurance checks for vulnerable populations Senior Services · Service intake and case 404-685-4344 Atlanta management 404-347-5293 Housing · Referrals and service connection to [email protected] PUBLIC RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO ATLANTA RESIDENTS DURING COVID-19 PRECAUTIONARY PERIOD community resources · Safety and reassurance checks Youth Services · Referrals and connection to [email protected] Atlanta community services· Safety and Housing reassurance checks · Ongoing news and information to AH assisted families that will support families with children. Bagged APS students can receive daily, free, APS Breakfast and bagged breakfast and lunch meals at the Schools Lunch following five school sites. The schedule starts Monday, March 16, and continues Mondays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to noon. • Bunche Middle School, 1925 Niskey Lake Road • Cleveland Avenue Elementary School, 2672 Old Hapeville Road • Douglas High School, 225 Hamilton E. Holmes Drive • Phoenix Academy, 256 Clifton St. • Sylvan Hills Middle School, 1461 Sylvan Road Groceries Starting March 23 at 10am-noon, all APS Atlanta families can receive a weekly bag of Community shelf-stable grocery items from the Food Bank Atlanta Community Food Bank. • Bunche Middle School, 1925 Niskey Lake Road • Cleveland Avenue Elementary School, 2672 Old Hapeville Road PUBLIC RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO ATLANTA RESIDENTS DURING COVID-19 PRECAUTIONARY PERIOD • Douglas High School, 225 Hamilton E. Holmes Drive • Phoenix Academy, 256 Clifton St. • Sylvan Hills Middle School, 1461 Sylvan Road Ready-to-Eat Goodr is partnering with APS to provide Hosea Williams Feed the Hungry: 404-755-3353Loaves and Goodr and Meals free ready-to-eat meals at the following Fishes: 678-373-9433 APS sites, beginning Monday, March 16.• Hosea Williams Feed The Hungry, food pantry, 4779 Mindy St.; Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to noon. (Bring ID.) More info: 404-755- 3353.• Loaves and Fishes, St. John the Wonderworker Parish, 543 Cherokee Ave.; Mondays through Fridays, 9-10 a.m. More info: 678-373-9433. PUBLIC RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO ATLANTA RESIDENTS DURING COVID-19 PRECAUTIONARY PERIOD Dinner The city’s Centers of Hope Afterschool For a full list and more information about the program, see Centers of Meal Program, which provides dinner the website here: Hope and a healthy snack to APS students https://www.atlantaga.gov/government/departments/parks- Afterschool ages 5-18 at various recreation centers, recreation/office-of-recreation/afterschool-program Meal is operating on a modified schedule Program starting Monday, March 16, running Mondays through Fridays, 4-6 p.m.•Adams Park Recreation Center •CT Martin Recreation & Aquatic Center •Anthony Flanagan Memorial Recreation Center •Bessie Branham Recreation Center •Coan Park Recreation Center •Dunbar Recreation Center •Grant Park Recreation Center •Grove Park Recreation Center •James Orange Recreation Center •Martin Luther King, Jr. Recreation & Aquatic Center •Arthur Langford Recreation Center •Peachtree Hills Recreation Center •Perkerson Park Recreation Center •Pittman Park Recreation Center •Rosel Fann Recreation Center •C. A. Scott Recreation Center •South Bend Recreation Center •Thomasville Recreation Center •William Walker Recreation CenterThe locations include Buckhead’s Peachtree Hills Recreation Center, 308 Peachtree Hills Ave. .
Recommended publications
  • Viewer's Guide
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  • Atlanta's Civil Rights Movement, Middle-Class
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  • Play Guide for the Great Society
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  • Martin Luther King Jr. Day Monday, January 21, 2019
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  • The History That Inspired I Dream
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  • Hosea Williams Exhibit (Cont.)
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  • Foot Soldiers Voting Rights Marches Congressional Gold Medal
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  • Rev Hosea Williams 3/25/92 P.O.Box 4672 Atlanta, GE )0302-4672 Dear
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  • How the Atlanta Daily World Covered the Struggle for African American Rights from 1945 to 1985
    Abstract Title of Dissertation: THE CAUTIOUS CRUSADER: HOW THE ATLANTA DAILY WORLD COVERED THE STRUGGLE FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN RIGHTS FROM 1945 TO 1985 Name: Maria E. Odum-Hinmon Doctor of Philosophy, 2005 Dissertation Directed By: Prof. Maurine Beasley, Ph. D. Philip Merrill College of Journalism This dissertation is a study of the Atlanta Daily World, a conservative black newspaper founded in 1928, that covered the civil rights struggle in ways that reflected its orientation to both democratic principles and practical business concerns. The World became the most successful black daily newspaper in the nation after becoming a daily in 1932 and maintaining that status for nearly four decades. This dissertation details how this newspaper chronicled the simultaneous push for civil rights, better conditions in the black community, and recognition of black achievement during the volatile period of social change following World War II. Using descriptive, thematic analysis and in-depth interviews, this dissertation explores the question: How did the Atlanta Daily World crusade for the rights of African Americans against a backdrop of changing times, particularly during the crucial forty- year period between 1945 and 1985? The study contends that the newspaper carried out its crusade by highlighting information and events important to the black community from the perspective of the newspaper’s strong-willed publisher, C. A. Scott, and it succeeded by relying on Scott family members and employees who worked long hours for low wages. The study shows that the World fought against lynching and pushed for voting rights in the 1940s and 1950s. The newspaper eschewed sit-in demonstrations to force eateries to desegregate in the 1960s because they seemed dangerous and counterproductive when the college students wound up in jail rather than in school.
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