Helping those that help themselves
Torus Tammer
A helping hand is available to men in the community who are down on
their luck and in need of ethereal intervention.
The Self Help Interfaith Program, commonly referred to as SHIP, is
designed to help those who are serious about getting off the streets and
back on their feet, said the Rev. John McFarland of the Fountain Valley
Methodist Church, which hosts the program.
“These folks sleep in our church for three weeks, and the church feeds
them, helps them get jobs, and makes sure they put their money away in a
bank until they graduate, at which point they get their cash and get off
the streets,” McFarland said. “It’s a great concept and has been
successful.”
The church, which is one of 15 facilities that hosts the program
throughout the year, has been a participant for the last decade. For the
last four years, the program has been coordinated by the husband and wife
team of Bruce and Gwen Boulter.
“It’s a 120-day shelter program that helps these men get a fresh
start,” Bruce Boulter said. “We require that they have a job within 30
days, and we assist them in putting resumes together and giving them
leads for work. We give them a bus pass to get to interviews, and they
get a personal advisor to help guide them. Once employed, their personal
advisor, who is a congregation volunteer, makes sure their paycheck goes
directly into their bank account.”
He added that one of his jobs is to take care of overnighters, which
means he stays with the new men in the program the first night they sleep
at the church.
“Someone has to be there with them for the entire time,” Boulter said.
“I try to be there every morning when they leave and every evening when
they return so that the doors are open and everything is ready for them.
It’s very important to let them know that people are pulling for them to
get rid of the problem that put them on the street.”
Gwen Boulter added that the men who have successfully trudged down the
path of rehabilitation realize that without God and the people who are
helping them, they wouldn’t be back on their feet and for that, they are
all very grateful.
Additionally, she said, the environment they create is important.
“I make sure there are dinners, and if dinners haven’t been donated,
guess who does the cooking,” she said. “The men have to set a dinner
table. The idea is to make the environment as much like a home as
possible.”
She noted that the downtrodden men the church houses are either
approached on the street or come to the church for help. The maximum
capacity she said is six to eight men at a time.
“Right now in the program we have two men, until April 14 at which
point it moves to another church” Gwen Boulter said. “One man who
participated in the program a year ago is now saving for a home. I just
can’t tell you enough how amazing it is to see them get back on their
feet.”
FYI
Anybody in need of help or who knows someone who does, should contact
the SHIP coordinator at (714) 802-5800 or go to The Mission at 15161
Jackson St., Midway City.
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