Federal Register/Vol. 63, No. 191/Friday, October 2, 1998/Notices
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Fiscal Year 2020 Continuum of Care Competition Non-competitive Awarded Projects Report Organization Name Project or Award Name Grant Number FY2020 Amount State:Alabama CoC Number: AL-500 CoC Name: Birmingham/Jefferson, St. Clair, Shelby Counties CoC Jefferson County Housing Authority AL0013L4C001811 FY2019 AL0013L4C002013 $3,737,584 One Roof AL-500 CoC Planning Project Application AL0186L4C002000 $273,350 2020 AIDS Alabama, Inc. Ascension Project Consolidated FY2019 AL0127L4C002005 $1,035,212 One Roof Coordinated Assessment FY2019 AL0144L4C002004 $377,643 First Light, Inc. Fourth Floor 2019 AL0010L4C002013 $117,915 The Cooperative Downtown Ministries, FY 2019 Consolidated PSH AL0001L4C002013 $794,516 Inc. The Cooperative Downtown Ministries, FY 2019 Safe Haven AL0003L4C002013 $128,834 Inc. The Cooperative Downtown Ministries, FY2019 Nashamah AL0006L4C002013 $223,262 Inc. One Roof HMIS Combined Grant FY2019 AL0005L4C002013 $332,480 AIDS Alabama, Inc. Le Transclusive Project Consolidated AL0142L4C002004 $460,076 FY2019 First Light, Inc. Rapid Rehousing 2019 AL0128L4C002005 $511,398 Jefferson-Blount-St. Clair Mental Health REACT Supportive Housing FY19 AL0021L4C002013 $667,722 Authority Pathways Inc. Safe Haven Shelter FY 19 AL0011L4C002013 $142,468 Jefferson-Blount-St. Clair Mental Health Supportive Housing Program FY 19 AL0019L4C002013 $524,928 Authority Youth Towers Inc. TH/RRH Hybrid FY2019 AL0165L4C002002 $117,462 First Light, Inc. TRIO PSH Combined FY2019 AL0008L4C002013 $437,590 AIDS Alabama, Inc. Way Station TH/RRH FY2019 AL0155L4C002003 $308,281 CoC Number: AL-501 CoC Name: Mobile City & County/Baldwin County CoC State of Alabama ADMH MI-Rental Assistance Mobile based AL0040L4C012013 $259,643 project Housing First, Inc. AL-501 CoC Planning Project Application AL0187L4C012000 $113,744 2020 Organization Name Project or Award Name Grant Number FY2020 Amount Housing First, Inc. -
HH Annual Report 2017 V7.Indd
17,850 NIGHTS OF SHELTER 10,504 hours of counseling and support COUNTLESS STEPS TAKEN THOUSANDS of lives touched 2017 Huckleberry House Annual Report See the numbers. And the incredible stories behind them. All young people are headed somewhere. Huck House helps them get home. For the kids we serve at Huckleberry House, getting to can help them secure housing and move closer to their a safe, supportive, and appropriate home is never a education and employment goals. straight shot. Especially when you consider from where many of them come. The fact is, we can put a roof over a young person’s head. We can keep them off the streets.But what we’re really Issues such as violence, neglect, abuse, and poverty have trying to accomplish is to get them “home.” Whether taken their lives far off the beaten path. In many cases, that home is with their family, another relative or friend, the dangerous and devastating circumstances in which a foster family, or a home of their own, the important these kids grow up has stalled their development. Which thing is that young people develop the skills and get the means they often have to go backward, before they can support they need to live safely and productively in a move forward. secure and stable environment. But whatever the journey home looks like, Huck House Because every young person needs that foundation to helps youth through it. get to a better place in life. Sometimes that means giving them coping and With your continued support, we can keep putting communication skills so family arguments don’t turn into our community’s at-risk youth on the path “home.” violence. -
Table of Contents OVERVIEW
PROGRAM EVALUATION FY2017 7/1/16 – 12/31/16 Our Mission To end homelessness, CSB innovates solutions, creates collaborations, and invests in quality programs. We thank our Partner Agencies for their assistance in collecting data and ensuring data accuracy for our community reports. FY2017 Program Evaluation Table of Contents OVERVIEW .......................................................................................................................................... 1 PERFORMANCE RATINGS ................................................................................................................... 4 SYSTEMS ............................................................................................................................................ 8 Family Emergency Shelter System .......................................................................................................... 8 Men’s Emergency Shelter System ....................................................................................................... 12 Women’s Emergency Shelter System .................................................................................................. 15 Emergency Shelter System................................................................................................................... 18 Prevention System ................................................................................................................................ 21 Rapid Re-housing System .................................................................................................................... -
Cityjbqyiipit REPORT Meeting Date: February 23, 2016 General Plan Element: Neighborhoods General Plan Goal: Enhance and Protect Neighborhoods
Item 12 CITYJBQyiipit REPORT Meeting Date: February 23, 2016 General Plan Element: Neighborhoods General Plan Goal: Enhance and protect neighborhoods ACTION Palo Verde Homes 14-ZN-2015 Request to consider the following: 1. Adopt Ordinance No. 4237 approving a zoning district map amendment from Single Family Residential (Rl-43) to Single Family Residential (Rl-18) and (Rl-35) Planned Residential Development (PRD), with a Development Plan and amended development standards, for a new 8-lot single family subdivision on +/- 4.8 acres, located at the southeast corner of Palo Verde Lane and Paradise View Street. 2. Adopt Resolution No. 10324 declaring "Palo Verde Development Plan" a public record. Key Items for Consideration • PRD Findings • Proposed density consistent with surrounding neighborhood • Building envelopes proposed to promote open space • Existing infrastructure sufficient to accommodate increased density • Public comment received by staff • Planning Commission heard this case on January 13, 2016 and recommended approval with a 5- 0 vote ErMcD6nald-Dnye= OWNER AMN Living Trust APPLICANT CONTACT Keith Nichter LVA Urban Design Studio ^Ek^aUey View Road 480-994-0994 Action Taken City Council Report | Palo Verde Homes (14-ZN-2015) LOCATION SEC Paradise View Street and Palo Verde Lane BACKGROUND General Plan The 2001 General Plan Land Use Element designates the subject site as Suburban Neighborhoods, which supports medium to small-lot single-family neighborhoods or subdivisions. Densities in Suburban Neighborhoods are typically more than one dwelling unit per acre, but less than eight dwelling units per acre. The density proposed for this subdivision is approximately 1.6 dwelling units per acre, consistent with the Suburban Neighborhoods designation. -
Chapter 11 ) LAKELAND TOURS, LLC, Et Al.,1 ) Case No
20-11647-jlg Doc 205 Filed 09/30/20 Entered 09/30/20 13:16:46 Main Document Pg 1 of 105 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ) In re: ) Chapter 11 ) LAKELAND TOURS, LLC, et al.,1 ) Case No. 20-11647 (JLG) ) Debtors. ) Jointly Administered ) AFFIDAVIT OF SERVICE I, Julian A. Del Toro, depose and say that I am employed by Stretto, the claims and noticing agent for the Debtors in the above-captioned case. On September 25, 2020, at my direction and under my supervision, employees of Stretto caused the following document to be served via first-class mail on the service list attached hereto as Exhibit A, via electronic mail on the service list attached hereto as Exhibit B, and on three (3) confidential parties not listed herein: Notice of Filing Third Amended Plan Supplement (Docket No. 200) Notice of (I) Entry of Order (I) Approving the Disclosure Statement for and Confirming the Joint Prepackaged Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization of Lakeland Tours, LLC and Its Debtor Affiliates and (II) Occurrence of the Effective Date to All (Docket No. 201) [THIS SPACE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK] ________________________________________ 1 A complete list of each of the Debtors in these chapter 11 cases may be obtained on the website of the Debtors’ proposed claims and noticing agent at https://cases.stretto.com/WorldStrides. The location of the Debtors’ service address in these chapter 11 cases is: 49 West 45th Street, New York, NY 10036. 20-11647-jlg Doc 205 Filed 09/30/20 Entered 09/30/20 13:16:46 Main Document Pg 2 of 105 20-11647-jlg Doc 205 Filed 09/30/20 Entered 09/30/20 13:16:46 Main Document Pg 3 of 105 Exhibit A 20-11647-jlg Doc 205 Filed 09/30/20 Entered 09/30/20 13:16:46 Main Document Pg 4 of 105 Exhibit A Served via First-Class Mail Name Attention Address 1 Address 2 Address 3 City State Zip Country Aaron Joseph Borenstein Trust Address Redacted Attn: Benjamin Mintz & Peta Gordon & Lucas B. -
The House Cross of the Mayo Indians of Sonora, Mexico
House Cross of the Mayo Indians of Sonora, Mexico Item Type Book; text Authors Crumrine, N. Ross Publisher University of Arizona Press (Tucson, AZ) Rights Copyright © Arizona Board of Regents Download date 03/10/2021 18:25:28 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/595190 THE HOUSE CROSS OF THE MAYO INDIANS OF SONORA, MEXICO A Symbol in Ethnic Identity N. ROSS CRUMRINE NUMBER 8 ANTHROPOLOGICAL PAPERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA PRESS TUCSON <~?{ 1964 Copyright © 1964 The Board of Regents of the Universities and State College of Arizona. All rights reserved. L.c. Card Catalog Number: 64-63524 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Chapter 1 .................................................................................................................. The Search for Criteria of Ethnic Identification Chapter 2 ................................................................................................................... 3 Kurusim and Tebatpo Kurusim Chapter 3 ................................................................................................................... 10 Societal and Wealth Correlates of the Tebatpo Kurus Chapter 4 ..................................................... .............................................................. 21 The Cultural Correlates of the Tebatpo Kurus Chapter 5 ................................................................................................................... 29 Conclusion: Systems of Ethnic Identity Chapter 6 . .. .. .... .... .. .. ... .. ..... .. -
Columbus and Franklin County, Ohio Coordinated Community Plan To
A PLACE TO CALL HOME FOR YOUTH Our Coordinated Community Plan for Youth Facing Homelessness in Columbus and Franklin County Columbus and Franklin County Continuum of Care March 2019 0 CONTENTS Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................................................... 3 Executive Summary ..................................................................................................................................... 5 Governance and Planning Structure ........................................................................................................... 9 Recent and Current Efforts Related to Youth Homelessness ................................................................ 14 Framework for Preventing and Ending Homelessness Among Youth .................................................. 17 Statement of Need .................................................................................................................................... 26 Special Considerations of Unique Populations ................................................................................... 31 Unaccompanied Youth Experiencing Homelessness ...................................................................... 31 Pregnant or Parenting Youth Experiencing Homelessness ............................................................ 33 Racial and Ethnic Minorities ............................................................................................................. 34 LGBTQ+ Youth -
HUCKLEBERRY HOUSE Cultural and Unified Support for San Francisco’S At-Risk Youth
HUCKLEBERRY HOUSE Cultural and Unified Support For San Francisco’s At-Risk Youth MONICA N. CLEMENS Student: 1212327062 Arizona State University College of Integrative Sciences & Arts Grant Writing for TWC 443 Dr. Schnoll *Report Form and Style Licensed by Commons 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305 USA. Created by Keith A. Watson, CISSP on 3/1/2005 Table of Contents Request for Exemption from Electronic Filing ............................................................................... 3 Abstract ........................................................................................................................................... 4 Huckleberry House History ............................................................................................................ 5 Logic Model .................................................................................................................................... 7 Need for Assistance ..................................................................................................................... 7 Social and Emotional Balance ..................................................................................................... 8 Ethnicity, Gender and Age .......................................................................................................... 8 Goals and Objectives ................................................................................................................. 10 Always Home – Always On ..................................................................................................... -
ACCESS Arab Health Summit
1 1 Table of Contents Contents 1 Table of Contents ........................................................................................................................ 2 2 Editorial Board ........................................................................................................................... 10 3 Scientific Committee .................................................................................................................. 10 4 Original Contributions ............................................................................................................. 11 Vaccine Knowledge, Awareness, and Utilization Among Arab-American Adults Prior to Hajj ............... 12 Abdulbaset M. Salim1, Carolyn Archer1, Madiha Tariq2, Linda Jaber1, Adnan Hammad2 and Paul E. Kilgore1, 3 ............................................................................................................................................. 12 Reducing Mammography Disparities: Outcomes from a Religiously-Tailored, Mosque-Based Intervention ............................................................................................................................................ 25 Aasim I. Padela1,2,3 Sana Malik1,4, Syeda Akila Ally1, Michael Quinn5, Stephen Hall1, Monica Peek5 .. 25 Assessing Prevalence, Knowledge, Attitude, Beliefs and Behavior of Hookah Use among Members of Arab and Chaldean Americans in Metro Detroit Area, Michigan, 2017 ................................................. 43 Farid Shamo, Laura de la Rambelje1, Madiha Tariq2, -
The 2019 Annual Report
Improving the future for at-risk and homeless youth starts with the right mindset. And everyone has a role to play. HUCKLEBERRY HOUSE 2019 ANNUAL REPORT Our contract with the community is about more than keeping kids off the street. It’s about changing the expectation of what we can collectively accomplish. Judayza Johnson didn’t expect to be homeless at 17. For almost 50 years, Huckleberry House has worked But when mom left town and didn’t return for weeks, relentlessly to redefine the community’s expectations cutting off all communication with Judayza, she found for our at-risk and homeless youth. As Franklin County’s herself with nowhere to turn. “At that point, what are your primary provider of shelter and services to these options?” she says. “I’ve seen other young people from young people, we see our role as not only addressing my neighborhood in similar situations turn to selling drugs immediate crises, but as working to resolve the root or selling their bodies just to survive. And they don’t try to causes of the problems. We partner with other like-minded push you away from it, they try to lure you in. There’s a lot organizations, service providers, and individuals in the of pressure to just give up and go that route.” community to expand our outreach to all youth, creating a community-wide safety net that helps ensure no young But Judayza remembered hearing a presentation from the person slips through the cracks. Huckleberry House at her school. She kept the card she received that day, and she decided to call the number. -
Key West's Highest Point, B77oll'zl Tf,'7,V~ "*"''"" - Plus Assorted Sandwiches Color $15 and Takes Room 3 , Key West, Florida 33040
Tie highest •point in Key West FREE DR. SANCHEZ, LAUGHING then, told me about his present wife, whom he mar- ried five years ago. "She's very good DR. JOSE SANCHEZ to me, takes care of me. She's a teach- BY EILEENMOOREQUINN FROM TIIE EdiTOR er, you know." HE DOESN"T LOOK like a lion. Nei- Petronia. I rolled cigars in the fac- Somehow we journeyed in conversa- ther does he roar, but speaks with a tion back to the 1930's, when Sanchez tory, and even tuned piano for awhile." went to work for Dr. Platt on 720 Flem- whispering tone of confidentiality. At 21 he was married, and at 25 he But he is a Lion. And the roar of ing Street. Another optometrist, Dr. water and electricity to consumers. took his first ride to Miami on the Kunn, decided to leave Key West around Hello- his life and achievements is heard from overseas railroad. I've spoken with a lot. of that time. Later, Dr. Platt's son sold the multitude he has served in the Keys the business to Dr. Sanchez, who then The Key Wester had to reschedule people who feel that the City should for well-nigh 60 years. "THERE WERE ONLY two ways out," its program featuring the Glenn became the only practising eye doctor not let the land it owns at the Spanish poured out and spilled Dr. Sanchez admitted, "by boat or by in Key West. Miller band. The date that was foot of Simonton Street be tradcad over me as I entered the home of Dr. -
Prospectus for Campground and Related Granger-Thye Concessions
FS-2700-34 (V.10/2012) OMB No. 0596-0082 Prospectus for Campground and Related Granger-Thye Concessions Sierra National Forest June 2017 Forest Service Prospectus for Campground and Related Granger-Thye Concessions Sierra National Forest I. Table of Contents I. Business Opportunity ............................................................................ 5 A. Introduction ................................................................................................................................................... 5 B. Area Description ............................................................................................................................................ 7 C. Description of Developed Recreation Sites and Facilities ............................................................................. 7 Permit Area #1 .............................................................................................................................................. 8 Permit Area #2 ............................................................................................................................................ 14 Table I.B.: Characteristics of Developed Recreation Sites ..................................................................... 18 D. Government-Furnished Property ................................................................................................................. 39 E. Government-Furnished Supplies ................................................................................................................