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The Nexus of Sex Work and Homelessness Wednesday March 6, 2019 Disclaimer
The Nexus of Sex Work and Homelessness Wednesday March 6, 2019 Disclaimer This project was supported by the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under grant number U30CS09746, a National Training and Technical Assistance Cooperative Agreement for $1,625,741, with 0% match from nongovernmental sources. This information or content and conclusions are those of the presenters and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be inferred by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government. NHCHC is a nonpartisan, noncommercial organization. Presenters Jonathan Santos- Ramos Director of Community Engagement & Strategic Initiatives Joanna Rivera Callen-Lorde Health Director of Transgender Center Housing New York, NY Ali Forney Center Aruna Krishnakumar, Tracee Brown LCSW Coordinator of Training Director of Health & Advocacy Outreach to Teens Pronouns: They/Them Callen-Lorde Ali Forney Center Learning Objectives Participants will be able to… • Provide introduction to the relationship between sex work and homelessness among diverse feminine-presenting communities. • Present service delivery efforts for feminine-presenting clients engaging in sex work, specifically with NYC youth. • Discuss nuances, challenges, and successes of providing care to special populations at the intersections of oppression AGENDA ▪ The Basics ▪ Defining Sex Work ▪ What is Feminine presenting/Transgender/Gender Non-Binary/Gender Non-Conforming and why is important ▪ Increases -
Download the Know Your Rights Brochure
RESOURCES KNOW YOUR RIGHTS LGBTQ Youth in Foster Care ACS LGBTQ Youth Resources HOTT (Health Outreach to Teens) – If you are having a problem in foster care or juvenile Callen-Lorde Community Health Center and Juvenile Justice Systems justice systems because of your sexual orientation, Free or low cost medical and mental health care/ gender identity, or gender expression, contact us. counseling, including physical exams, gynecological www.nyc.gov/acs/LGBTQ (212) 676-9421 exams, and STD/HIV treatment and testing to LGBTQ and homeless youth ages 13-24. Hormone therapy The Ali Forney Center available for youth ages 18-24. The nation’s largest and most comprehensive organization www.callen-lorde.org (212) 271-7200 dedicated to providing support and services for homeless LGBT youth, aged 16-24, to escape the streets and begin Hetrick-Martin Institute/Harvey Milk High School to live healthy and independent lives. The Supportive Services Department provides group, www.aliforneycenter.org (212) 206-0574 family and individual counseling for LGBT youth and families. Also offers assistance with after school programs, The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender intern placement, GED assistance, peer counseling, Community Center – Center Youth/YES Program pantry and clothing. The second-largest LGBT community center in the world www.hmi.org (212) 674-2400 providing a full range of support, education, arts, and leadership programming to LGBTQ and allied youth The Trevor Project – Trevor Lifeline ages 13-21 through the Center Youth/YES program. A free and confidential hotline offering trained counselors www.gaycenter.org (212) 620-7310 available and equipped to support LGBTQ young people in crisis, feeling suicidal, or in need of a safe The Door and nonjudgmental place to talk 24/7. -
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. -
Doing Business Search - People
Doing Business Search - People MOCS PEOPLE ID ORGANIZATION NAME 50136 CASTLE SOFTWARE INC 158890 J2 147-07 94TH AVENUE LI LLC 160281 SDF67 SPRINGFIELD BLVD OWNER LLC 129906 E-J ELECTRIC INSTALLATION CO. 63414 NEOPOST USA INC 56283 MAKE THE ROAD NEW YORK 53828 BOSTON TRUST & INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT COMPANY 89181 FALCON BUILDER INC 105272 STERLING INFOSYSTEMS INC 107736 SIEGEL & STOCKMAN 160919 UTECH PRODUCTS INC 49631 LIRO GIS INC. 12881 THE GORDIAN GROUP INC. 64818 ZUCKER'S GIFTS INC 52185 JAMAICA CENTER FOR ARTS & LEARNING INC 146694 GOOD SHEPHERD SERVICES 156009 ATOMS INC. 116226 THE MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF NEW YORK CITY INC. 150172 SOSA USA LLC Page 1 of 1464 09/26/2021 Doing Business Search - People PERSON FIRST NAME PERSON MIDDLE NAME SCOTT FRANK C NATALIE DEBORAH L LUCIA B MEHMET ANDREW PHILIPPE J JAMES J MICHAEL HARRY H MARVIN CATHY HUIYING RACHEL SIDRA SUSAN UZI B Page 2 of 1464 09/26/2021 Doing Business Search - People PERSON LAST NAME PERSON_NAME_SUFFIX FISCHER PRG NATIONAL URBAN FUNDS LLC SULLIVAN DEBT FUND HLDINGS LLC LAMBRAIA ADAIR AXT SANTINI PALAOGLU REIBEN DALLACORTE COSTANZO BAILEY MELLON STERNBERG HUNG KITAY QASIM SHANKLIN SCHEFFER Page 3 of 1464 09/26/2021 Doing Business Search - People RELATIONSHIP TYPE CODE MCT EWN EWN MCT MCT CFO OWN CFO CFO CEO MCT MCT MCT CEO CEO MCT COO COO CEO Page 4 of 1464 09/26/2021 Doing Business Search - People DOING BUSINESS START DATE 09/21/0016 11/20/0019 01/14/0020 03/10/0016 08/08/0008 04/03/0021 11/19/0008 06/02/0014 09/02/0016 03/03/0013 04/03/0021 06/02/0018 08/02/0008 12/05/0008 04/14/0015 02/22/0018 06/05/0019 03/08/0014 01/03/0020 Page 5 of 1464 09/26/2021 Doing Business Search - People DOING BUSINESS END DATE Page 6 of 1464 09/26/2021 Doing Business Search - People 65572 RUSSELL TRUST COMPANY 53596 MOHAWK LTD 68208 ST ANN'S ABH OWNER LLC 136274 NEW YORK CITY CENTER INC. -
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 .................................................................................................................... -
Police Abuse and Misconduct Against Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender People in the U.S
United States of America Stonewalled : Police abuse and misconduct against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the U.S. 1. Introduction In August 2002, Kelly McAllister, a white transgender woman, was arrested in Sacramento, California. Sacramento County Sheriff’s deputies ordered McAllister from her truck and when she refused, she was pulled from the truck and thrown to the ground. Then, the deputies allegedly began beating her. McAllister reports that the deputies pepper-sprayed her, hog-tied her with handcuffs on her wrists and ankles, and dragged her across the hot pavement. Still hog-tied, McAllister was then placed in the back seat of the Sheriff’s patrol car. McAllister made multiple requests to use the restroom, which deputies refused, responding by stating, “That’s why we have the plastic seats in the back of the police car.” McAllister was left in the back seat until she defecated in her clothing. While being held in detention at the Sacramento County Main Jail, officers placed McAllister in a bare basement holding cell. When McAllister complained about the freezing conditions, guards reportedly threatened to strip her naked and strap her into the “restraint chair”1 as a punitive measure. Later, guards placed McAllister in a cell with a male inmate. McAllister reports that he repeatedly struck, choked and bit her, and proceeded to rape her. McAllister sought medical treatment for injuries received from the rape, including a bleeding anus. After a medical examination, she was transported back to the main jail where she was again reportedly subjected to threats of further attacks by male inmates and taunted by the Sheriff’s staff with accusations that she enjoyed being the victim of a sexual assault.2 Reportedly, McAllister attempted to commit suicide twice. -
Annual Report 2018-2019
ANNUAL REPORT 2018-2019 1 2 CONTENTS A Letter from Our Executive Director 4 A Letter from the Chair of the Board 5 Our Namesakes 6 Celebrating Our History: 50 Years of LGBTQ Health 8 Timeline 12 Reflections on our History 14-17 Our Patients 18 A Year in Photos 22 Our Staff 24 Callen-Lorde Brooklyn 26 Board of Directors 28 Senior Leadership 29 Howard J. Brown Society 30 Our Supporters 32 ABOUT US Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy and education to drive positive change around the world, because we believe healthcare is a human right. 3 A LETTER FROM OUR EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Dear Friends, Supporters, and Community Members, Fifty years ago, Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson were among the first brick throwers in the Stonewall Rebellions, igniting the fire that began – slowly – to change LGBTQ lives. That same year, the beginnings of Callen- Lorde started when two physicians opened the St. Mark’s Health Clinic to provide free healthcare services to the ‘hippies, freaks, and queers’ in the East Village. Today, that little clinic is Callen-Lorde Community Health Center - a network of health centers soon to be in three boroughs of New York City and improving LGBTQ health worldwide. What has not changed in 50 years is our commitment to serving people regardless of ability to pay, our passion for health equity and justice for our diverse LGBTQ communities and people living with HIV, and our belief that access to healthcare is a human right and not a privilege. -
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 -
Annual Report 2019 - 2020
ANNUAL REPORT 2019 - 2020 1 2 ABOUT US Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy and education to drive positive change around the world, because we believe healthcare is a human right. CONTENTS History and Namesakes . 4 A Letter from our Executive Director Wendy Stark . 6 A Letter from our Board Chair Lanita Ward-Jones ������������������������������������������������������������ 7 COVID-19 Impact . 8 Callen-Lorde Brooklyn ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������10 Advocacy & Policy ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������10 The Keith Haring Nurse Practitioner Postgraduate Fellowship in LGBTQ+ Health ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 12 Callen-Lorde by the Numbers . 14 Senior Staff and Board of Directors ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 16 Howard J. Brown Society . .17 John B. Montana Society �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������17 -
Rights of Transgender Adolescents to Sex Reassignment Treatment
THE DOCTOR WON'T SEE YOU NOW: RIGHTS OF TRANSGENDER ADOLESCENTS TO SEX REASSIGNMENT TREATMENT SONJA SHIELD* I. INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................... 362 H . DEFINITIO NS ........................................................................................................ 365 III. THE HARMS SUFFERED BY TRANSGENDER ADOLESCENTS CREATE A NEED FOR EARLY TRANSITION .................................................... 367 A. DISCRIMINATION AND HARASSMENT FACED BY TRANSGENDER YOUTH .............. 367 1. School-based violence and harassment............................................................. 368 2. Discriminationby parents and thefoster care system ....................................... 372 3. Homelessness, poverty, and criminalization...................................................... 375 B. PHYSICAL AND MENTAL EFFECTS OF DELAYED TRANSITION ............................... 378 1. Puberty and physical changes ........................................................................... 378 2. M ental health issues ........................................................................................... 382 IV. MEDICAL AND PSYCHIATRIC RESPONSES TO TRANSGENDER PEOPLE ........................................................................................ 385 A. GENDER IDENTITY DISORDER TREATMENT ........................................................... 386 B. FEARS OF POST-TREATMENT REGRET ................................................................... -
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 ..................................................................................................... -
Estudio Comparativo Del Impacto De La Homosexualidad En El Proceso De Envejecimiento Del Hombre Gay En Nueva York Y Madrid
TESIS DOCTORAL 2020 ESTUDIO COMPARATIVO DEL IMPACTO DE LA HOMOSEXUALIDAD EN EL PROCESO DE ENVEJECIMIENTO DEL HOMBRE GAY EN NUEVA YORK Y MADRID PROGRAMA DE DOCTORADO EN ANÁLISIS DE PROBLEMAS SOCIALES Autor: MATEO SANCHO CARDIEL Directora de Tesis: DRA. Dª VERÓNICA DÍAZ MORENO 1 Departamento de Sociología III (Tendencias Sociales) Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología de la UNED “Estudio comparativo del impacto de la homosexualidad en el proceso de envejecimiento del hombre gay en Nueva York y Madrid” Autor: Mateo Sancho Cardiel. Máster en Problemas Sociales por la UNED. Directora de la Tesis: Doctora Doña Verónica Díaz Moreno. 2 AGRADECIMIENTOS La conclusión más importante de toda tesis doctoral es que la construcción del conocimiento tiene una naturaleza necesariamente coral. Esta tesis, en concreto, no hubiese sido posible sin la asistencia, la motivación, la fe en mí y el impulso de mi marido, Nelson Núñez-Rodríguez, capaz de oscilar entre la exigencia y la comprensión. Gracias por tu paciencia y por tu solidez, que han hecho posible que no engrosáramos la amplia lista de parejas que no sobreviven al doctorado de uno de sus miembros. Gracias a mis padres, José Miguel y Celina, por haberme educado en un espacio de amor incondicional, intercambio de ideas y empatía por el otro, por haberme inculcado la importancia de la escucha. Sin esa ductilidad emocional mamada en casa, creo que hubiese sido imposible crear en tan poco tiempo el ambiente de confianza necesario para que los informantes abrieran su corazón. Me siento privilegiado por haber formado parte de un hogar que entiende las diferencias entre cuatro hermanos (gracias también Simón, Valeria y Eloísa) y en el que se fomentó la curiosidad y las pasiones como base del aprendizaje.