Though the holiday is weeks away, it looks and smells a lot like Thanksgiving. The scent of roast pork and gravy hangs in the air. A long, narrow tableโtoo big for all but the most fecund nuclear familiesโis covered with a plaid tablecloth. Kids laugh. Someone plays a piano. The first big storm of the season roars outside.
At the dinner table sit Don and Mary Williams. They and their 9-year-old son, Michael, moved to Reno from the Bay Area last summer after the rent on their apartment in a โraggedy part of townโ jumped from $450 to $1,000 within a matter of months. The salary from Williamsโ job in a winery warehouse couldnโt cover the rising costs. They came to Reno with a little money that they had saved up, โbut that went real quick.โ Their savings were eaten up by motel rent as they struggled to stay off the streets.
โWe tried to beat the crowd running from there to here,โ Don says. โBut the job market wasnโt what we expected.โ
โAnd man, what a culture shock,โ Mary says. โWe attempted to leave and go back to California 100 times. We would have been better living on the street in California. We didnโt meet good people [in Reno].โ
Across the table sits DeVereaux Sanders, who is also new to Reno. He moved here with his wife and three children from Sacramento, where money had gotten so tight that they had to give up their home and move into a motel. They moved to Reno last spring, staying with friends while the couple looked for work. Sanders got a string of temp jobs, but nothing lasting.
โI wanted a change,โ Sanders says quietly. โChange in state, change in environment.โ
At the other end of the table sits Carol Shipley, who came to Reno from Oregon with her four children to work things out with her ex-husband. Things didnโt work out. That was two and a half years ago. She stayed and rented a home, but her ex stopped paying child support, and bills began to add up. Last summer, she and the kids had to move into a motel.
โI thought I could save money [in the motel],โ she says, laughing grimly. โIt didnโt work out that way.โ
Probably none of these families imagined that, come November, theyโd be eating and sleeping in the fellowship hall of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship on Del Monte Lane, hanging out with longtime UU members Jim and Betty Hulse and April Townley, the makers of that eveningโs meal, and UU Vice President Ryan Conly, who would be staying with the families that night.
These families are housed through Interfaith Hospitality Network of Renoโthe only facility in the area that lodges families as a unit, rather than separating adult males from women and children. One of 86 programs in the national Interfaith Hospitality organization, IHN supports โtransitionalโ families until they can find and afford other accommodations. Families are screened by IHN director Ann Mary MacLeod and, if approved, offered at least a month-long stay. Nights are spent in one of 11 host churchesโwhich include Presbyterian, Methodist, Unitarian, Catholic, Episcopalian and Lutheran religious facilitiesโand days are spent at the IHN Family Day Center, located in the basement of Faith Lutheran Churchโs manse on West Seventh Street.
Host congregations take turns providing lodging to the families on the church site, with congregation members volunteering to cook for and stay the night with families. The churches, however, supply only food and accommodations; while religious discussions are not discouraged between host congregation volunteers and families, neither are they encouraged. Support congregations, congregations that donโt have the facilities to house families, help provide food and supplies. During Christmas week this year, Temple Sinai, a reform Jewish synagogue that acts as a support congregation, will relieve Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd of its hosting duties so that Good Shepherd members can enjoy Christmas festivities. The Northern Nevada Muslim Community will act as Temple Sinaiโs support congregation.
Renoโs IHN began in June 2001 after months of planning by its Board of Trustees. Board member MacLeod stepped up to fill the director position after IHNโs first director, Lee Derbyshire, stepped down last August.
In the past year and a half, with the help of the Interfaith community, word about IHN has spread quickly. There are 20 families currently on the waiting list.
โOur goal is to get people housed,โ MacLeod says. โWeโre not a shelter. Weโre a force to get families back on their feet, and not for the cycle to start all over.โ
A tall, graceful woman with short, dark hair, MacLeod is a research scientist by trade. She has been serving IHNโs board since before the Reno network became a reality. When asked about the state of homelessness in the areaโand how IHN serves the communityโshe smiles wide.
โCan I be truthful now,โ she asks, โand tactful later?โ
โYou keep families together, and thereโs an incentive,โ she continues. โThereโs a reason for them to work.โ
When a parent can look into a childโs face every morning, she says, itโs hard to shrink from responsibility. IHN makes that possible.
โI didnโt have a gut-level understanding of what itโs like to be homeless until I got this job,โ MacLeod says. โIโd be overwhelmed [with gratitude] that my windows rolled up in the car. When I do an intake, I hear [a familyโs] life story, and I realize my life story isnโt that different, but I had family.โ
Without stable family or friends to fall back on, MacLeod says, many families are just one fire, one car accident, one serious illness away from the streets.
โPoverty is just insipid. Itโs just ugly. [Families] come [to Reno] and the cost of living is not commensurate with minimum wage. They go to a motel for $100 a week, and the motel goes up to $150 โฆโ
The Williams family found out about rising motel costs the hard way. Their motel rent jumped up during the events season last summer. They ended up sleeping in their car one night. When they told this to workers at a state agency, the agency threatened to take Michael away from them if the temperature outside dropped โtoo low.โ After more than a month of struggling to afford motel rent, they found out about IHN through the Washoe County Family Resource Center. โIn America, if youโre homeless, that must mean youโre a drug addict, a bum,โ Mary says. โNot that maybe your house burned down. There are a lot of different reasons [for homelessness]. There are not โฆ resources [in Reno] for families.โ
Unlike Don and Mary Williams, Sanders is quiet, even hesitant, as he talks about what brought him here. As his youngest two children, DeVreanna, 7, and DeVaugn, 5, display their seemingly endless stock of energy and his oldest, DeAndre, 13, surfs the Internet, Sanders leans forward in his chair, elbows on his knees, and remembers life in Sacramento. His wife, Khadija, who works with the mentally and physically challenged, is at work tonight.
โMoney started growinโ thin,โ he says. โThe car was acting up. Bills were due.โ
He is silent for a moment.
โIt got real tough. Tougher than you can imagine.โ
But things are going better than they were in Sacramento. Sanders is thankful to be in a new environmentโand out of motels.
โOur goal is to get transportation,โ he says. โSave money, get housing and get an occupation.โ
Things are looking up for all three families. Shipley hopes to be able to save enough money from her job at Wells Fargo to have a home by Christmas. The Williams family is moving into a two-bedroom home near Idlewild Park this month.
“[IHN] has been wonderful to us and for us,โ Don says.
Sitting beside him at the table after dinner, speaking over the howl of the wind and the laughter of the kids, Mary is blunt in her gratitude.
โWe just wanted to make a new life for ourselves, make a change for the better,” she says. “IHN saved our lives.”
