The Homebrew for the Homeless contest is just one of the events that are a part of the annual Tahoe Beach Bash.
The Homebrew for the Homeless contest is just one of the events that are a part of the annual Tahoe Beach Bash.

It may seem like the beautiful, all-season setting of South Lake Tahoe wouldnโ€™t have homeless citizens. But, like most American cities, there is a group of working poor that needs the communityโ€™s help. This is where the Tahoe Coalition for the Homeless can help out, and this weekend features an event to that end.

The Tahoe Beach Bash on July 20 features an annual Homebrew for the Homeless contest, in which local brewers vie for a yearโ€™s bragging rights while raising funds for the Coalition. The event includes live music, beer and wine tastings, a beach-side barbecue, games and face-painting for small people, vendors and a silent auction.

Four-year Coalition baord member Tiffany Grimes said the family-friendly Beach Bash is her groupโ€™s main fundraiser for the year. The Coalition has summer outreach and relief programs, and its major work is done in the winter, as it sponsors a warm room during the long and cold season.

โ€œWe set up some beds and cots to give the homeless a warm place to stay from the end of December all the way through April,โ€ Grimes said.

This past winter, the warm room had an average of 25 guests each night, for a total of 113 people during the season. About a quarter of the guests are considered chronically homeless, which means that they have been homeless for a full year or more, or homeless four times or more in the past three years.

Grimes said the location of the warm room changes each season.

โ€œWe donโ€™t have a building or a facility, so we have to find a vacant place,โ€ she said of her all-volunteer group. โ€œLast year, it was a former dentistโ€™s office, and we just had people put cots and bunk-beds everywhere. It is a struggle, but itโ€™s a great causeโ€”and weโ€™d love to get more people involved.โ€

The Coalition also helps the homeless get more stability when they can. There were 24 people who found housing with the groupโ€™s support last winter, while eight others found work.

โ€œThrough the whole year, we go into the encampments and any area where thereโ€™s a gathering of homeless people to do counseling and help with jobs,โ€ Grimes said. โ€œWe do everything we can to get them back to a home.โ€

Grimes agreed that the Tahoe homeless may seem like an invisible problem, but she said that it is definitely present.

โ€œWalking down our streets, you wonโ€™t see that many in the casino areas, but you will see lots of homeless people in the woods because they have encampments,โ€ she said. โ€œThere are also many homeless youths who live in cars, with their families, or they are couch-surfers.โ€

Jobs are also needed. Tellingly, 21 percent of people who used the warm room last season had work in Tahoe, including the food and beverage industry, retail and ski resorts.

โ€œThatโ€™s one of the statistics that people donโ€™t really understand: homeless people here do have jobs,โ€ Grimes said. โ€œPeople have such a negative connotation of the homeless, a stigma around it, until you really dig deep into it. Some people here really are one paycheck away from being homeless.โ€

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