Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
In September 2004, Frank Calton, board chairman of the local Bay Area
Rescue Mission, sat at a table during a retreat with some church friends
and a pastor from Bayside Covenant Church, sketching out his dream for a
residence at which homeless women could live for up to two years with
their children.
Calton, a Bayside member who managed the church's building program, knew
there was nothing in Placer County to serve the estimated 200 homeless
women and children who live there. "They are the most underserved
population in our area."
Recently that dream became a reality, when three families moved into the
Acres of Hope Renewal Center amid the scenic Sierra foothills. The
residence will eventually house 10 families.
Staff and volunteers will use a holistic approach to meet the spiritual,
social and physical needs of the women and their families, who come to
the residence through referral. A broad-based approach - including
counseling, job training, parenting and life skills - will help improve
the women's chances of not returning to the streets.
Children will receive tutoring and be paired with a mentor. Partnerships
have been formed with the business community, colleges and trade
schools, to help the women pursue work.
At the time Calton presented his idea, Jim Holst, pastor of outreach at
Bayside, said the church had been discussing whether they wanted to
spread money around to a number of small projects or invest in a few
major opportunities.
Holst was excited while listening to Calton sketch his grand vision. "If
Frank gets an idea, he's like a bulldog," Holst says. "He's going to
work hard and it probably will get done, so I thought this could really
happen."
A steering committee was formed of members from Bayside and neighboring
Valley Springs Church. They began meeting with government and social
service representatives to turn the dream into reality in late 2004.
The residence site, the former Applegate Inn, was identified in April
2005. Small groups from different churches refurbished each of the
rooms, adding special touches so that none are the same. Six hundred
people have offered to help with the program.
Volunteers will have plenty of opportunities to continue serving,
including delivering meals to residents for several months. The resident
families will eat communally, but Acres of Hope won't have a commercial
kitchen ready until sometime during the summer. Until then, the program
will depend on volunteers cooking meals at home and then bringing them
to the residence.
Despite a heavy dependence on volunteers, the program will cost more
than $1 million dollars to operate, Calton says. A three million dollar
capital campaign also is underway to purchase the 10 acres of property
on which the residence is located. The property will provide room for
expanding the program.
"There's a lot of room for faith," Calton says.
To learn more or contribute financially, visit the Acres of Hope website
www.acresofhopeonline.org, or email info@acresofhopeonline.org
Acres of Hope Welcomes First Residents
APPLEGATE, CA (June 2) - Hope begins in the strangest places. For three
homeless women and their children in Placer County, California, it began
on the back of a napkin at a church retreat.
Copyright 2005 The Evangelical Covenant Church www.covchurch.org
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