Category: Community

  • Help People Experiencing Homelessness Access the COVID-19 Vaccine

    Help People Experiencing Homelessness Access the COVID-19 Vaccine

    TPCH COVID-19 Vaccine Options and Ambassadorship Training
    Hosted by TPCH with Pima County Health Department and El Rio Community Health Center
    April 2, 2021    –    1pm-3pm

    Click here to register.

    As of March 25, 2021, all people experiencing homelessness are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in Pima County.  Vaccines are being provided at multiple vaccination clinics and through pop-up vaccination events at congregate shelters, day programs, and meal sites. Join TPCH, Pima County Health Department, and El Rio Community Health Center for an informative training about COVID-19 vaccine options for people experiencing homelessness.

    • Learn basic information about each of the COVID-19 vaccines available in Pima County
    • Find out how people experiencing homelessness can schedule a vaccine appointment or receive a vaccine at pop-up homeless vaccination events
    • Hear about common vaccine concerns and fears that lead to vaccine hesitancy
    • Learn effective messages and tips you can use as a vaccine ambassador to help people experiencing homelessness build vaccine confidence and get vaccinated

    This two-hour training is perfect for homeless services staff in street outreach, shelter, day center, meal site, and housing programs, as well as people with lived experience of homelessness and other trusted community leaders including faith leaders, librarians, and others who interact regularly with people experiencing homelessness.

    Click here to register for the April 2 Vaccine Options and Ambassadorship training. 

  • People Experiencing Homelessness Now Eligible for COVID-19 Vaccine

    People Experiencing Homelessness Now Eligible for COVID-19 Vaccine

    ***March 25, 2021****

    All people experiencing homelessness are now eligible for COVID-19 vaccination in Pima County.  People experiencing homelessness have three options to access the COVID-19 vaccine:

    Homeless Vaccination Pop-Ups:  El Rio Community Health Center is conducting vaccination pop-up events at community shelters, day centers, and meal sites.  Approximately 200 doses of the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine are being distributed to people experiencing homelessness at pop-up events weekly.

    Vaccination pop-up events are only for people experiencing homelessness and are not published.  These events are held in congregate shelters and other places people experiencing homelessness already gather.  If you are not experiencing homelessness, you will not be able to receive a vaccine at these events.  If you are a local shelter or day program and interested in learning more about these events, please email tpch@tucsonaz.gov.

    Scheduling through Pima County Health Department: People experiencing homelessness can also schedule appointments for vaccination at any of the Pima County Health Department’s three main vaccination sites (below).  If you schedule an appointment at one of these locations, you will likely receive the Pfizer or Moderna two-dose vaccine. This will require you to make an appointment for a second dose within 2-4 weeks (depending on the vaccine you receive).

    Tucson Convention Center (Walk-through)

    260 S. Church Avenue, Tucson, AZ

    Register online at https://register.vaccine.pima.gov/. (Email address required)

    Register by phone: call (520) 222-0199 (Mon-Fri, 8:30am-8pm, Sat & Sun, 9am-4pm)

    Tucson Medical Center: (Drive-Thru)

    2597 N. Wyatt Drive, Lot 29, Tucson, AZ

    Register online at https://register.vaccine.pima.gov/. (Email address required)

    Register by phone: call (520) 222-0199 (Mon-Fri, 8:30am-8pm, Sat & Sun, 9am-4pm)

    Banner South – Kino Stadium (Drive-Thru)

    2500 E. Ajo Way, Tucson, AZ

    Register online at https://www.bannerhealth.com/staying-well/health-and-wellness/wellness/covid/pima-county-vaccine.

    Register by phone: call 1-833-509-0908

    Stay up to date on news and information regarding COVID-19 and vaccination at the Pima County Health Department’s COVID-19 vaccination page.

    Scheduling through State of Arizona (University of Arizona): People experiencing homelessness can also schedule vaccine appointments at the State of Arizona’s University of Arizona vaccine center.  If you schedule an appointment at one of these locations, you will likely receive the Pfizer or Moderna two-dose vaccine.  This will require you to make an appointment for a second dose within 2-4 weeks (depending on the vaccine you receive).

    Schedule an appointment online (email address required) at https://podvaccine.azdhs.gov/.

    Schedule by phone: call 1-844-542-8201

    Schedule with Southern Arizona VA (Veterans): U.S. Veterans experiencing homelessness can schedule a vaccine appointment with the Southern Arizona VA Health Care System (SAVAHCS).

    Sign up to schedule an appointment online at https://www.va.gov/health-care/covid-19-vaccine/stay-informed (email address required).

    Schedule by phone: call (520)  629-4729

    Help TPCH Get the Word Out to People Experiencing Homelessness – Become a TPCH Vaccine Ambassador today.  Click the image below to learn more. 

     

  • TPCH Publishes Don’t Miss Out: A Guide to 2021 Economic Impact Payments for People Experiencing Homelessness

    TPCH Publishes Don’t Miss Out: A Guide to 2021 Economic Impact Payments for People Experiencing Homelessness

    The American Rescue Plan signed into law on March 11 includes another round of direct payments to individuals and families. People who do not have a permanent address or do not typically file taxes, known as nonfilers, are still eligible to receive a stimulus check.

    On March 24, 2021, TPCH published Don’t Miss Out: A Guide to the 2021 Economic Impact Payments for People Experiencing Homelessness.  The guide provides information about the 2021 Economic Impact Payments for people experiencing homelessness. It includes answers to commonly asked questions and local resources to help people experiencing homelessness receive Economic Impact Payments if they are eligible. This guide also provides steps people experiencing homelessness can take if they were eligible for the first or second Economic Impact Payments in 2020 but did not receive them.

    Click here to download the guide to share with homeless advocates and people experiencing homelessness.

    Special Considerations for People Experiencing Homelessness

    For the second and third round of payments, people who receive disability support or are part of other federal programs, should not need to take any additional steps to receive their check. The federal government will automatically issue checks to people who are part of these federal programs:

    • Social Security Old-Age retirement, Survivors or Disability Insurance
    • Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
    • Railroad Retirement Board benefits
    • Veterans Affairs (VA) benefits

    For nonfilers, the IRS will use 2019 records, including anyone who used the IRS nonfiler tool (which is now closed) to claim a first or second stimulus check. The IRS has not yet confirmed when payments for nonfilers will be issued. For more information, please visit the IRS’s Get My Payment Frequently Asked Questions.

    For those individuals and families for which the IRS already has bank information, they will most likely receive a direct deposit into their bank account. Others may receive a paper check or debit card. People without a permanent address can use the address of a shelter, friend, or family member.

  • TPCH Opposes SB 1325 – Conversion Therapy is dangerous and has no place in Arizona.

    TPCH Opposes SB 1325 – Conversion Therapy is dangerous and has no place in Arizona.

    No on SB 13

     

    “The SB 1325 striker amendment is needless and unjust,” said TPCH Board Chairperson, Daniela Figueroa. “It is devastating that the State legislature is spending time during the COVID-19 pandemic to legislate hate.”

    TPCH opposes the striker amendment to Senate Bill 1325.  Arizona youth and families have a right to expect that a therapist practicing under a license from the state will not put them at risk of severe harm. Arizona has already rejected the dangerous and disavowed practice of so-called “conversion therapy.”  If passed, the proposed striker amendment will prevent any restrictions on this harmful practice by the State, professional licensing boards, local governments, and school boards. This bill undermines medical regulation and the public trust by opening a broad and unqualified loophole that would allow any provider to engage in abusive practices by claiming they are based on conscience or belief.

    Take action today: Urge your state legislators to oppose the striker amendment to SB 1325.

    Send an automated message to your state legislators

    Read the amendment text

    Check the bill’s status

    How will this legislation hurt Arizona? What does this have to do with homelessness?

    Legislation like the proposed SB 1325 striker amendment further stigmatizes and de-humanizes LGBTQ+ Arizonans. Local and national research consistently indicates heightened risk of homelessness and other harmful experiences among LGBTQ+ communities.

    The 2015 United States Transgender Survey found that one in three transgender Americans experience homelessness at some point during their lifetimes and the National Survey on LGBTQ Youth Mental Health found that LGBTQ+ youth are suffering.

    • 48% of LGBTQ+ youth reported engaging in self-harm in the past twelve months, including over 60% of transgender and non-binary youth.
    • 46% of LGBTQ+ youth report they wanted psychological or emotional counseling from a mental health professional but were unable to receive it in the past 12 months.
    • 10% of LGBTQ+ youth reported undergoing conversion therapy, with 78% reporting it occurred when they were under age 18.
    • 29% of LGBTQ+ youth have experienced homelessness, been kicked out, or run away.
    • 1 in 3 LGBTQ+ youth reported that they had been physically threatened or harmed in their lifetime due to their LGBTQ identity.
    • 61% of transgender and non-binary youth reported being prevented or discouraged from using a bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity.
    • 86% of LGBTQ+ youth said that recent politics have negatively impacted their well-being.

     

  • Protect Gender Diverse Arizonans. TPCH Opposes Arizona HB 2725.

    Protect Gender Diverse Arizonans. TPCH Opposes Arizona HB 2725.

    No on HB 2725

    TPCH opposes Arizona House Bill 2725. This one-sentence bill seeks to preemptively erase the legal recognition of non-binary and other gender diverse Arizonans identities. HB 2725 would require state identification documents to contain only a male or female gender marker. The bill pre-emptively bans nonbinary people, who are neither exclusively male nor female, from using gender-neutral X markers on their IDs, even though this is not currently permitted under Arizona law.

    “HB 2725 is needless and unjust,” said TPCH Board Chairperson, Daniela Figueroa. “It is devastating that the State legislature is spending time during the COVID-19 pandemic to legislate hate.”

    Take action today by contacting legislators and urging them to oppose HB 2725.

    How will HB 2725 hurt Arizona? What does this have to do with homelessness?

    Bills like the HB 2725 further stigmatize and de-humanize gender diverse Arizonans including youth who are disproportionately impacted by homelessness. Although there is limited research regarding the prevalence of homelessness among gender non-binary persons, local and national research consistently indicates heightened risk among LGBTQ+ communities. The 2015 United States Transgender Survey found that one in three transgender Americans experience homelessness at some point during their lifetimes and the National Survey on LGBTQ Youth Mental Health found that LGBTQ+ youth are suffering.

    • 48% of LGBTQ+ youth reported engaging in self-harm in the past twelve months, including over 60% of transgender and non-binary youth.
    • 46% of LGBTQ+ youth report they wanted psychological or emotional counseling from a mental health professional but were unable to receive it in the past 12 months.
    • 10% of LGBTQ+ youth reported undergoing conversion therapy, with 78% reporting it occurred when they were under age 18.
    • 29% of LGBTQ+ youth have experienced homelessness, been kicked out, or run away.
    • 1 in 3 LGBTQ+ youth reported that they had been physically threatened or harmed in their lifetime due to their LGBTQ identity.
    • 61% of transgender and non-binary youth reported being prevented or discouraged from using a bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity.
    • 86% of LGBTQ+ youth said that recent politics have negatively impacted their well-being.
  • Feb. 11, 2021 – Update on COVID-19 Pandemic on Evictions & Homelessness in Pima County with Dr. Keith Bentele

    Feb. 11, 2021 – Update on COVID-19 Pandemic on Evictions & Homelessness in Pima County with Dr. Keith Bentele

    In this video from the February 11, 2021 TPCH Quarterly Membership Meeting (general council), Dr. Keith Bentele with University of Arizona Southwest Institute for Research on Women provides an update on the University’s forecasting of the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on homelessness in Pima County.

    Watch the recorded presentation here. 

  • Feb. 11, 2021 Update on COVID-19 Vaccination Plans & People Experiencing Homelessness – Pima County Health Department

    Feb. 11, 2021 Update on COVID-19 Vaccination Plans & People Experiencing Homelessness – Pima County Health Department

    In this video from the February 2021 TPCH Quarterly Membership Meeting (general council), Louie Valenzuela with the Pima County Health Department provides an update on COVID-19 vaccination activities in Pima County and plans to make vaccination available to people experiencing homelessness in the region.

    View the presentation recording here. 

  • Bringing Pima Home: Overview of 2021 TPCH Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness

    Bringing Pima Home: Overview of 2021 TPCH Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness

    In this video from the February 11, 2021 TPCH Quarterly Membership Meeting (general council), Jason Thorpe with the City of Tucson Housing & Community Development provides an overview of the TPCH Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness.

    Watch the recorded presentation here.

  • TPCH partners with Emerge! Center Against Domestic Abuse to host DV 101 for Housing & Homeless Service Providers Training (March 3, 2021)

    TPCH partners with Emerge! Center Against Domestic Abuse to host DV 101 for Housing & Homeless Service Providers Training (March 3, 2021)

    DV 101 BANNER
    Improve Understanding and Build Skills to Better Support Victims of Domestic Violence in Your Housing and Homeless Service Programs
    Join TPCH and Emerge! Center Against Domestic Abuse for a free Domestic Violence 101 webinar for housing and homeless service providers. This webinar will include foundational education related to the dynamics of abuse, power and control, and domestic violence with practical approaches and strategies that housing and homeless service providers can use to more effectively work with victims of domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking.

    This session is perfect for direct service staff including outreach workers and housing navigators, resource specialists, case managers, shelter workers, and others, as well as program managers.

    March 3, 2021 – 10:30am-12:00pm

    Register online at https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Ce7NdEM1Qc2mFbU7JP7AXQ.

    Trainer:

    Ed Mercurio-Sakwa, Chief Executive Officer, Emerge! Center Against Domestic Abuse

  • TPCH General Council Meets February 11, 2021

    TPCH General Council Meets February 11, 2021

    JOIN TUCSON PIMA COLLABORATION TO END HOMELESSNESS FOR OUR QUARTERLY MEMBERSHIP MEETING

    FEBRUARY 11,2021, 3PM – 5PM

    Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all TPCH meetings are being conducted virtually until further notice.

    Register to attend: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUoc–pqz4oE9SJ3nIhi-aPRHLfnJ484UTF

    MEETING MATERIALS

    Download the Meeting Agenda

    Download the Roster of TPCH Members with Current Voting Privileges

    Download the Draft 2021-2024 Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness

    MEETING AGENDA

    15 minutes Roll Call & Consent Agenda

    Approval of Agenda, Prior Meeting Minutes

    Daniela Figueroa
    20 minutes COVID-19 Vaccination Plans

    Presentation and Q&A session with Pima County Health Department regarding vaccination plans and people experiencing homelessness

    Pima County Health Department
    20 minutes COVID-19, Homelessness, and Evictions

    Presentation and Q&A session with University of Arizona SIROW regarding the impact of COVID-19 on evictions and homelessness

    Dr. Keith Bentele
    10 minutes TPCH Update

    Review of recent and upcoming TPCH activities, new members

    Daniela Figueroa
    20 minutes Committee Updates

    CoC Program Grant Committee

    Coordinated Entry Committee

    Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee

    HMIS Committee

    System Performance Evaluation Committee

    Youth Action Committee

    Committee Representatives
    25 minutes Community Plan

    Overview presentation and motion to approve the 2021 TPCH Community Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness

    10 minutes New Business/Announcements Group Discussion