Providence House breaks ground on expansion to better serve families in crisis

Providence House breaks ground on expansion to better serve families in crisis

Author: Lee Chilcote, Freshwater Cleveland

Providence House, the first crisis nursery in Ohio and one of only 70 similar facilities in the U.S., recently broke ground on a $2 million, three-phase project in Ohio City that will allow the nonprofit agency to better serve Northeast Ohio families in crisis.

“We have a waiting list that is 20 to 30 kids long right now,” explains Natalie Leek-Nelson, Executive Director of Providence House, which is expanding its current location at W. 32nd Street and Lorain Avenue. “Phase I of the expansion will allow us to have 250 kids per year in our crisis nursery, and it will also increase the ages of the kids so that we can take older siblings.”

Providence House provides short-term housing for kids who are unsafe in their homes because they’re at risk of abuse, neglect or generally unsafe conditions. The agency is unique because it offers intensive therapy to help families stay together. More than 95 percent of families whose children end up at Providence House are eventually reunified. The facility also offers housing to kids whose parents are unable to care for them (for instance, because they’ve suddenly gotten sick).

“Parents don’t want to give up their kids, so things often escalate until they’re out of control,” says Leek-Nelson. “Providence House is an alternative to the emergency foster system. We let families know it’s okay to get help.”

When asked why Providence House’s work is important, Leek-Nelson cites a statistic that 75 percent of high school dropouts are abused kids. “Is it the school system or something at home that keeps them from succeeding?” she asks.

Providence House has already raised about 75 percent of the funds that are needed to complete Phase I of its expansion plans. “It’s been a big challenge, but the community has really stepped up,” says Leek-Nelson. “We have more than 300 individuals, foundations and businesses that have donated.”

Source: Natalie Leek-Nelson
Writer: Lee Chilcote

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Providence House needs help protecting children

Providence House needs help protecting children

Author: Regina Brett, The Plain Dealer

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Every time I get to tuck my grandbabies in bed, I whisper to them how much they are loved.

“Who loves you bigger than the sky?”

“Gita,” Asher says, naming me first.

“Who loves you bigger than the mountains?”

“Mommy,” Asher says.

“Who loves you bigger than the ocean?”

“Daddy,” Asher says.

He and his sister, Ainsley, are tucked in every night with hugs and kisses and love.

Not every child is so lucky.

The children who come to Providence House often arrive with everything they own in a blue plastic bag. All of them have been abused or neglected or are on the verge of those.

Providence House is a crisis nursery and a shelter for at-risk babies and children up to 6 years old, children like the 4-year-old who went hungry so often, he hid food to feed his baby sister.

Children like Bobby, who came there after his fourth foster home didn’t want him. He came back to Providence House many years later carrying a fire truck with a bow on top. He said to give it to a little boy like him.

“I was here two weeks, but all I remember was my 5th birthday party. It was the first one I ever had,” he told the staff. Then he started to cry. “I remember people singing to me and hugging me. It was the first time someone told me, ‘I love you.'”

Children like the three who showed up one winter in a van, sitting on black garbage bags filled with their belongings. Their mom had been badly beaten and fled her partner. The children stayed at Providence House for a month while she recovered and found a safe place for them to stay.

Children like the two girls whose mom is dying of leukemia. Their mom grew up in foster care and didn’t want her girls sent there. An oncologist introduced their mom to Providence House so they would have somewhere to stay when she is too sick to care for them.

The stories both break your heart and fill it.

One day a woman drove up with a van full of things from the Providence House wish list at www.provhouse.org She cried as she told them that 20 years ago she came there drug- and alcohol-addicted. She and her baby girl had been evicted. She’s now clean and sober and got her child back. “I held a baby shower at my office for you because I always swore I would pay you back for helping me,” she said.

Another day, a letter came from Iowa. A woman thanked the staff for protecting her and her daughter when she fled an abusive relationship. Inside the envelope was the child’s first grade report card. It had an honor roll star on it. “I would never have seen this if Providence House hadn’t been there for me and my daughter,” she wrote.

Last year Providence House protected 137 children.

Last year, Providence House had to turn 120 children away.

They need help to help more children.

Providence House has launched a $1.8 million, three-phase project. It will put business offices and living areas on one campus. It will allow them to raise the age of children they shelter to 10 years old. It will allow siblings to stay together in one room. It will create a Family Intervention Center to help parents become better parents.

On Sunday, Providence House holds its City2City 5K Child Abuse Prevention Run. Registration is at 8 a.m. The race starts at 9 a.m. at Tower City in downtown Cleveland. It ends at Providence House in Ohio City. Pre-registration is $15; race day. $20. (For information contact Hermes Sports at 216-623-9933 or go tohttp://www.hermescleveland.com/roadracing/events/city2city.asp

Children deserve a safe place to sleep. Let’s help Providence House tuck them in so they fall asleep knowing just how much they are loved.

Join Regina Brett at 7 p.m. Wednesdays on WKSU FM/89.7 for “The Regina Brett Show.” This week: How to reward employees. To reach Regina Brett: rbrett@plaind.com, 216-999-6328 Previous columns online: cleveland.com/brett

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Twitter: @ReginaBrett

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Providence House breaks ground on its biggest expansion

Providence House breaks ground on its biggest expansion

Author: Tonya Sams, The Plain Dealer

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Providence House will celebrate the expansion of its West 32nd Street campus with a groundbreaking ceremony at 11 a.m. today.

“We are so excited,” said Natalie Leek-Nelson, Providence House president and CEO. “This will allow us to meet state requirements and increase the number of children we care for. This is the largest expansion in Providence history.”

Providence House protects Cuyahoga County children who are at risk of being abused or neglected. The nearly $2 million, three-phase project combines all of its administrative offices and residential areas onto one campus.

Some of the residential areas and administrative offices are in Leo’s House, across the street from Providence House.

Providence House founder Sister Hope Greener, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson; Joseph Gauntner, Cuyahoga County deputy chief of staff for health and human services; Cleveland City Councilman Joe Cimperman and County Councilwoman Yvonne Conwell were expected to join staff, board members and donors for the event.

Providence House raised the funds from private donors, companies and organizations, as well as the Ohio Department of Mental Health and the City of Cleveland’s Vacant Properties Initiative.

Leek-Nelson said child abuse cases were up 25 percent from January 2010 to December 2011, according to the Public Children Services Association of Ohio, a statewide child welfare monitoring organization.

Last year 21,209 calls about suspected child abuse and neglect were made to 216-696-KIDS. Cuyahoga County ranks No. 1 in Ohio for child abuse and neglect cases.

Leek-Nelson said that many parents who take their children to the campus want to end the cycle of abuse and are taking responsibility. Leaving their children in a safe environment allows parents to focus on their own well-being so that they can be good caregivers.

“Ninety-nine percent of the children are reunited with their families,” she said. That usually occurs within a month.

Construction is to begin Wednesday. Demolition on six homes on the site has begun. The first stage, which includes a new 7,000-square-foot wing to the Crisis Nursery in Leo’s House, is to be completed in November.

Providence House now takes in children up to 6 years old. But this expansion will raise the age limit to 10, allowing siblings to stay together in one room.

This part of the expansion will also help to increase the number of children that Providence House can protect. The number of children who reside there will increase from 12 to 20, which will allow a yearly total of 250 children.

The second part of the expansion includes transforming Providence House into a new Family Intervention Center. The center will help provide parenting education and six months of aftercare once children are returned to their parents.

The final stage includes the creation of the 60,000-square-foot Children and Family Campus with the Children’s Village Homes and Education Center. This will allow all the facilities to reside under one roof. That project is expected to be completed by 2020.

Leek-Nelson said that in the last four years, 422 children had to be turned away.

“It’s heartbreaking,” she said. “These children need this. We have to grow to be able to help them.”

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Providence House and Cleveland Indians Wives

Providence House and Cleveland Indians Wives

Providence House, Ohio’s first licensed crisis nursery, offers emergency shelter to children newborn through five years old actively living in crisis. Since 1981, Providence House has provided quality, center-based, family focused residential care to over 5000 infants and children in crisis. Natalie Leek-Nelson, President and CEO explains Providence House and how they connected with the Cleveland Indians wives.


Providence House Receives Three National Awards

Providence House Receives Three National Awards

Local Agency Recognized for Program, Legislation and Documentary

Cleveland, Ohio – Providence House was honored last week with three awards at the 2009 National Respite and Crisis Nurseries Conference in Burbank, CA.. Providence House was named winner in each of the following categories:

  • Best Documentary: Providence House: Promises Kept, produced by Glazen Creative
  • Studios Best Innovative Program Design: Providence House “Days of Care” Crisis Nursery Program
  • Respitograhy Award: honoring State Representative Matt Dolan for visionary public policy in his work as legislative sponsor for the passage of Ohio’s new Crisis Nursery Law SB242.

“It is such an honor for our agency to be recognized on a national level. We’re absolutely thrilled with the acknowledgment of our programs and services and could not be more grateful to the ARCH National Respite Network and Lifespan Respite Coalition for all of their initiative and advocacy to support lifespan respite providers and crisis nurseries across the US,” said Natalie Leek-Nelson, CEO and President of Providence House.

Leek-Nelson also presented two sessions at the national conference: Risk and Response in Crisis Respite: Evaluating Risk and Opportunity while Implementing Service Design Changes and Crises Averted: The Crisis Nursery Model and Family Outcomes. Each session was filled to capacity.

Providence House is Ohio’s first and one of the nation’s longest operating crisis nurseries. Today, Ohio remains one of only 13 states with formal crisis nursery legislation which supports 28-year old Providence House and the recently founded Blessing House in Lorain County.

# # #

Contact: Meghan Moroney, Ph: 216-651-5982, ext. 226
Email: meghan@provhouse.org

2037 West 32nd Street
Cleveland, OH 44113

Ph: 216.651.5982
Fax: 216.651.0112

www.provhouse.org


Neubert Painting Selects Providence House for 2nd Annual Charity Paint Giveaway

Neubert Painting Selects Providence House for 2nd Annual Charity Paint Giveaway

Cleveland, Ohio –Providence House, Ohio’s first and one of the nation’s longest operating crisis nurseries, has been selected as the award recipient of Nuebert Painting’s 2nd Annual Charity Paint Giveaway. Neubert Painting, in partnership with Sherwin-Williams Company, founded the Charity Paint Giveaway in an effort to provide paint services and support to individuals or organizations who are unable to afford the paint and labor on their own.

Sherwin-Williams is generously donating the paint and supplies; Nuebert Painting will cease its business operations to provide the manpower to paint Leo’s House, which shelters infants up to 2 years of age on the Providence House campus.

“We truly could not have picked a more deserving organization – or a more interesting project! This house will be a challenge for us but we are all really excited about it,” said John Neubert, Owner of Neubert Painting. “We’re happy to get involved with such a worthy cause. Now they’ll have an even more beautiful house to shelter at-risk infants and children.” Providence House was selected from 10 other nominations for this Charity Paint Giveaway.

A group of over 70 volunteers, including both professional painters from Neubert Painting and staff from SherwinWilliams, will be onsite Tuesday, August 4th to paint Leo’s House. Their goal? Finish the entire house in just one day! Einstein Brothers Bagels and Chipotle Mexican Grill will generously support the project by providing muchneeded food and beverages for the volunteers and staff that day.

“We are truly honored to have been chosen as the recipient of the Neubert Painting Charity Paint Giveaway. We could not be more grateful to Neubert Painting and Sherwin-Williams for their ongoing support of our mission,” said Natalie Leek-Nelson, CEO and President of Providence House. “We’ve got 26 little people to feed, shelter and clothe and given the current state of the economy, it is highly unlikely that we would have been able to afford this paint project ourselves.”

# # #

Providence House is a national model in providing safe and loving care for the area’s most vulnerable children: newborns through age five. More than an emergency shelter to protect against and help prevent child abuse, the organization promises to support families in crisis through innovative, intensive programs and family education. Our mission is to protect at-risk children, prevent child abuse and neglect and preserve fragile families. As a private, non-profit agency, Providence House is 98% privately funded.

Contact: Meghan Moroney, Ph: 216-651-5982, ext. 226
Email: meghan@provhouse.org

2037 West 32nd Street
Cleveland, OH 44113

Ph: 216.651.5982
Fax: 216.651.0112

www.provhouse.org


Providence House Honored with American Jewish Committee’s 2009 Isaiah Award

Providence House Honored with American Jewish Committee’s 2009 Isaiah Award

Cleveland, Ohio – Providence House, Ohio’s first and one of the nation’s longest operating crisis nurseries has been selected as the American Jewish Committee’s (AJC) 2009 Isaiah Award recipient. Established in 1963, this prestigious award has recognized over 40 different Cleveland-area agencies dedicated to improving the human condition. The award annually recognizes an organization with long-standing, measurable success with a program or initiative focused on the betterment of society.

“Providence House is a remarkable organization, which provides a safe, loving environment for at-risk infants and children who have parents in crisis that are temporarily unable to care for them, but who want to keep their children and learn how to become better parents,” said AJC Isaiah Award Selection Committee Chair Robert Fuerst. “AJC is honored to recognize this truly deserving recipient of the Isaiah Award.”

Providence House was selected among six finalists. Past recipients include: The AIDS Task Force of Greater Cleveland, West Side Ecumenical Ministry, North Coast Community Homes and The Gathering Place.

“We are truly honored to receive this award and could not be more appreciative of the support and recognition bestowed upon us by the American Jewish Committee,” said Natalie Leek-Nelson, CEO and President of Providence House. “The babies and children of Providence House have been blessed to receive support from so many members of Cleveland’s Jewish community since our founding in 1981; the Isaiah Award is truly a culmination of the spirit of their personal commitment to protecting children in our community.

This prestigious award was presented at the Cleveland Chapter of the American Jewish Committee’s Annual Meeting last night at Temple Emmanuel. David Bernstein, Associate Director of the Community Services Department of the AJC, was the featured keynote speaker at the event.

# # #

Providence House is a national model in providing safe and loving care for the area’s most vulnerable children: newborns through age five. More than an emergency shelter to protect against and help prevent child abuse, the organization promises to support families in crisis through innovative, intensive programs and family education. Our mission is to protect at-risk children, prevent child abuse and neglect and preserve fragile families. As a private, non-profit agency, Providence House is 98% privately funded.

Contact: Meghan Moroney, Ph: 216-651-5982, ext. 226
Email: meghan@provhouse.org

2037 West 32nd Street
Cleveland, OH 44113

Ph: 216.651.5982
Fax: 216.651.0112

www.provhouse.org


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