This shelter is dirtier than the county jail and t...
This shelter is dirtier than the county jail and there is lots of theft here.
This shelter is dirtier than the county jail and there is lots of theft here.
Help so many people and feed many people and allow people to become hopeful to getting on your feet after obstacles such as loss of job,economy,illness,accidents,divorce,disaster,drugs,mental illness,economic downfall,relationship problems,relocating,construction,and numerous situations
Staff and security are useless, they don't follow their own schedule but penalize residents who don't follow the schedule and most peoples property ends up stolen. The dorm smells like urine.
This place help me get on my feet , resources are there ,all you need is the motive and want to make a difference. Staff and case management housing all that help . waiting period on getting in is pretty long. Hot team works..also familys with kids get housed . great place
It's great that you help the homeless,feed,house,but there's a big flaw do, you have masks? If you do why are your clients walking the streets UNMASKED ,STANDING,LAYING ABOUT ON SIDEWALKS
UNMASKED IN GROUPS?
Thanks from the bottom of my heart there is such an experience to live & enjoy a healthy meal(s) as St. Vincent DePaul Village. I will never forget this fantastic journey and all the volunteers that pull together to make a big difference in one's own life.
Very unfriendly and unkind at a time when kindness is necessary the most. I have found that the whole system are lifts. They lie to all the women in this country when they lead these abused women to believe that there will be resources to help them! Stay in the relationship, trust me when I say that ALL of them will deliver more abuse than any one man can dish out,,
Stayed at the single men's shelter there in 2008 for six months. It was a decent shelter, the intake process was going to be insanely long. I got in quick, like within 2 day's going through the police's HOT team program. You have to initiate to contact with them first and explain your homelessness. If they believe you and can validate your situation they get you in fast. St. Vincent's reserves a few beds for that program specifically. Again, the shelter won't tell you about it, it's on you to take initiative and show you need help through the police HOT team program. This all was how it was twelve years ago. Can't imagine it's changed much since.