Category Archives: COVID-19

Our House and general updates on the coronavirus disease.

Our House Combines with CAPN Clinics

 

Our House, Inc. and Community Advanced Practice Nurses (CAPN Clinics) Combine to Strengthen Families, End Homelessness, and Provide Quality Healthcare to the Medically Underserved. 

Atlanta, GA – Our House, dedicated to ending the cycle of homelessness for children and families experiencing homelessness in the metro Atlanta area, officially combined operations with Community Advanced Practice Nurses (CAPN) Clinics, a leading healthcare provider in Atlanta, to offer an integrated solution of health and human services to improve the wellbeing of our community’s most vulnerable populations. CAPN Clinics will operate as a program of Our House and the combined organization will provide a pathway to stability and independence for families experiencing homelessness through access to health care, early childhood education, housing, and employment. 

Tyese Lawyer remains the President and CEO of Our House. Mrs. Lawyer is an outstanding, highly respected nonprofit leader with two decades of experience on the front line of ending homelessness in metro Atlanta. Each and every employee of CAPN is integrated into the combined organization chart. 

“Our House has a 35-year history providing a robust array of wrap-around services to families and children in Metro Atlanta. We are committed to addressing issues of equity and access for those experiencing homelessness and those at risk of homelessness,” said Tyese Lawyer. Combining our work with CAPN Clinics will deepen our impact as access to quality healthcare is critical to our work of strengthening families and ending homelessness. Our House’s history of growth and strong management systems serve as a perfect balance to the strong healthcare model CAPN Clinics has built.” 

The program offerings and services, client populations, and geographic coverage of both organizations will continue exactly as they are. Healthcare, Rapid Re-Housing, Early Childhood Education, Shelter, and Workforce Development will all continue to be delivered with our combined commitment to excellence. Each organization’s workforce will become part of the combined organization working in tandem to ensure that the health and human needs of our participants are met and that together we can improve their life by simultaneously addressing the social determinants of health and fundamental human needs. 

“It is our strong belief that the combined strength of the organizations will allow for increased innovation and growth to serve more children and families, more effectively,” said Tanya Hamburger, former CAPN Board Chair, who joined Our House’s Board of Directors. “This partnership is also expected to result in greater efficiency and will significantly increase our reach.” 

The combination offers great potential for expansion and growth in the future but be assured that no programs or services will change or cease, no client populations will be reduced, and no service locations will close as a result of the merger. Our House will also work to renovate and expand service locations as appropriate. 

 

About Our House 

At Our House, we are game-changers. Our House is a nonprofit organization serving children and families experiencing homelessness in the Greater Atlanta area. Our House provides shelter to live and education to thrive for families experiencing homelessness. Since 1987, the organization has helped thousands of individuals overcome homelessness through its Early Childhood Education, Employment Training Services, Housing Services and Family Services programs.  

The combination with CAPN Clinics deepens the Our House impact in the community by strengthening the lives of people who are medically underserved. We partner with homeless shelters that primarily serve families, women, and children to provide primary care and mental healthcare free-of-charge. For more information, visit www.ourhousega.org. 

 

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ECE Centers Open

Our House is excited to announce our ECE campuses in Decatur and Atlanta will open to families on June 1, 2020. Phase one of school reopening will require all parents dropping off kids to wear masks when entering the building. To manage the safety of our families and staff, children and parents’ temperatures will be checked upon arrival.

In accordance with health and safety guidelines recommended by the CDC, Our House will minimize the number of individuals that can enter its facilities at a given time. We appreciate your understanding as we transition back to welcoming our students to school!

COVID-19 Update: March 27,2020

March 27, 2020

In response to the latest mandates by government and partner agencies, Our House’s early childhood education program will remain closed through April 6, 2020. We understand this is an added burden for the over 100 children and parents served by our ECE program in Atlanta and Decatur, and continue to identify opportunities to ensure the families we serve are not forgotten.

For our families, we are exploring funding and staffing opportunities to provide digital education and support, onsite services including childcare for parents that lack the flexibility to remain home, and food and supplies for the nearly 500 individuals served through our interrelated programs. Our House will continue to partner with volunteers and nonprofits to ensure our donation closet is stocked and supplies such as diapers, formula, household and personal items are available as needed. We expect to have more clarity about how to move forward on April 13, 2020.

As members of the Greater Atlanta community, we are united in overcoming this pandemic while meeting the immediate needs of families experiencing homelessness. Together, we will emerge stronger.

Thank you to our partners at Jackson Spalding for compiling  today’s update on COVID-19. Please take some time to download today’s update and check back on our site as we learn more. Thank you for your support of Our House during this health and economic crisis.

How COVID-19 is Impacting Our House


March 18, 2020

These past few days have been incredibly busy for Our House as we navigate the recent world crisis, while also ensuring our children and families have the support they need to weather the economic and health-related impact of COVID-19.

We appreciate all supporters who have reached out to inquire about our children and families and identify ways they can help through this period of adjustment. Thank you for your unwavering commitment.

Our House recognizes many of our families work jobs with little to no paid time off and childcare has been critical to their ability to succeed. Unfortunately, we have had to cancel all early childhood education classes until March 31, 2020. We want our families and supporters to know our Advocates will be available to assist families via email during these times. Updates will also be provided via our Bloomz parent communication app, website and social media.

While our education program has halted, we continue to operate our 24/7 emergency shelter and provide families with a supply of household and personal items, as well as meals and access to resources to sustain their path to self-sufficiency. We are currently housing 17 families, and provide after-care support for over 100 families who have exited our housing program.

If you would like to help during this time, please consider an online donation to Our House. Your gift will ensure we can maintain supplies and continue to serve children and families impacted by homelessness.
As always, thank you for your continued support of Our House and the children and families we serve. We cannot do our work without you.

Tyese Lawyer
President and CEO

P.S. You can also donate supplies from our Amazon Wish List. We are in need of laundry detergent, hand soap, Clorox wipes and paper towels. Items can be shipped or delivered to our Atlanta campus located at 173 Boulevard NE. Please contact Marquez Allen to schedule onsite deliveries.

ECE Classes Canceled

March 17, 2020

Since the onset of the recent health crisis, Our House has remained committed to the safety of the children and families we serve. Due to the recent State of Emergency declared by Governor Kemp, as well as mandates set forth by our education partners, Our House early childhood education classes have been canceled until March 31, 2020. Both our Atlanta and Decatur sites will suspend classes effective immediately.  Family and Child Advocates will be available to families via email.

Our emergency shelter will remain open 24/7 to the children and families we serve. During this time Our House is committed to ensuring the safety and health of the families in our care.

We encourage families with access to Facebook to join our Alumni Group to ask questions and share tips and resources with peers. Our House will communicate with families any new updates and changes regarding operations and education activities via our Bloomz parent communications platform, our website, social media and by email.

If you are in need of other emergency care options, especially for health care and first responders, please contact our partners at Quality Care for Children via their help line: 1-877- ALL GA KIDS (877-255-4254).

We appreciate your understanding during this health crisis and look forward to safely returning to class in the coming weeks.

Our House Open for School

March 16, 2020
We are committed to supporting our families on the road to self-sufficiency. We recognize that many of our enrolled families work in positions with limited to no paid time off. It is in recognition of these equity challenges that Our House will open for children on Monday, March 16, 2020. We are working to ensure that if you must go to work, safe care for your children is not a barrier. In order to ensure the safest environment for our staff, parents can help us in the following ways:
  • Keep your child home if they are sick.
  • If you or someone you have been in contact with meet the criteria for the coronavirus disease, please self-quarantine.
  • When entering Our House facilities, wash your hands and/or use the hand sanitizing stations provided.
  • While Our House encourages a high attendance rate, you have our support if you want to keep your children at home.

We are working to ensure that our staff is healthy and available to provide the services that will help you obtain and/or maintain self-sufficiency. Staff continue to follow universal precautions, sanitize classrooms daily, and monitor their own health and safety.

Our licensing agency has provided information to help families and programs. Please visit the Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning for a list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) about the current situation and check daily for updates.

For more trusted information about the coronavirus disease, please read:

We have placed posters throughout the building that encourage staying home when sick, and outline cough and sneeze etiquette and hand hygiene. Please review and adhere to this guidance. You can download the CDC’s Share the Facts document and Stopping the Spread of Germs document to learn more.

COVID-19 Update

March 13, 2020

You likely have heard from various media outlets about the coronavirus and the new cases in the U.S. and in Georgia. Our House has and will continue to follow best practices established by our child care licensing agency, Bright from the Start, and the Center for Disease Control. We are aware that many of our local school districts have announced closures over the next few weeks. We are in conversations about how this impacts Our House and our ability to deliver quality service. Our utmost concern is as always the staff, children and families in our care.

We are meeting and reviewing information over the next day or two to determine our next steps. In the meantime, we encourage you to view the previously distributed prevention information as well as view below for information about keeping your child healthy at home and our procedures doing so at school.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, coronavirus outbreaks in young children are uncommon, and severe symptoms are even rarer in children. Even so, to prevent the spread of illness, we will continue to monitor the children in our care for signs of illness, including fever, cough, difficulty breathing, body aches, fatigue, sore throat, headache, and diarrhea. If your child is exhibiting any of these systems, please keep them home. In addition, we will utilize good health practices such as appropriate handwashing, covering coughs or sneezing with a tissue or into the elbow, and disinfecting surfaces. We will continue to enforce the rules prohibiting children and staff who are sick or who show specific symptoms of illness from being in child care facilities.

For more information on children and the coronavirus, please visit the CDC website. Though the symptoms of the coronavirus are similar to the flu, there is no vaccine currently available to prevent the coronavirus. Infectious disease specialists strongly recommend that children and adults receive a flu vaccination because it can help protect them from various strains of the influenza virus.

  • We will keep children who become ill at the child care facility in a separate room where interactions with unexposed children and staff will be limited until the family arrives.
  • We will enforce guidelines for excluding children with infectious diseases from attending the child care facility. If your child is not at school due to illness, please inform the child’s teacher. If you do not contact the teachers, they will contact you to gather information regarding your children’s absence. Children can return to school after being fever free for 24 hours without medication. During this time of concern, we will require a doctor’s note (or approval from an administrator if a note cannot be obtained) to return to school. We will practice daily health checks of children and adults each day for illness. Teachers will inquire about children’s health upon arrival at school. They will also perform a general health check and only take temperatures if needed.
  • We will ensure that staff members who are ill remain home or are sent home if they become ill during the day.

These procedures for proper handwashing can reduce the spread of germs:

  • Wet your hands with clean running water and then lather them with soap; don’t miss the backs of your hands, between your fingers, and under your nails.
  • Scrub your hands for at least 20 seconds (about the time it takes to sing the “Happy Birthday” song twice).
  • Finally, rinse your hands thoroughly with clean, running water. Dry them with a paper towel, use the towel to turn off the faucet, then dispose of the towel in a trash receptacle.

The following links provide more information about flu prevention and about the coronavirus:

Finally if you suspect illness including the Flu or Coronavirus· Visit your primary care doctor or pediatrician as a first line of defense before visiting an emergency department or urgent care center.