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Barbara McInnis (1935 – July 19, 2003) was an American public health nurse, tuberculosis specialist, teacher, and innovator who dedicated her life to providing - as well as increasing the accessibility of - health care services for homeless people.
There were six transitional housing programs created under the Wu administration in Boston in January 2022. Mayor Michelle Wu's administration cleared a tent encampment of several hundred people living in the area known locally as the Mass and Cass (also known as "Methadone Mile"), and created six low-threshold, transitional housing sites to divert people displaced from the encampment.
[37] [38] The facility helps over 2,200 patients a year stay off the street and out of congregate settings while they recover from acute illnesses and medical procedures. McInnis House also serves undocumented , terminally ill , homeless people with dignified end-of-life care . [ 39 ]
The Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter was located at 477 Peachtree Street NE, at the corner of Pine Street in the SoNo subdistrict of Downtown Atlanta, Georgia, United States, just south of Midtown. It was officially closed on August 28, 2017, after many years of political wrangling over the site and its management.
In 1986, the Rosie's Place shelter was rebuilt at 889 Harrison Ave, on the land of the original Warwick House, from private and nonprofit donations. Tiernan refused government money for the project. In 1995, the organization opened a home for women living with HIV in Dorchester.
Chris Pine checks in for his Parade interview from the interior of a classic 1965 Airstream trailer currently perched in the front yard of his Los Angeles home. It comes complete with recessed ...
Chris Pine is all about Americana, and few things scream that concept more than his carefully restored 1965 Airstream in the front yard of his LA home. Pine recently gave us all a virtual tour of ...
Old Pine Street Church, May 2, 2016 Old Pine is now the only remaining Presbyterian building in Philadelphia from before the American Revolutionary War. Continuing its more than 200 years of community activism, Old Piners were among the first to respond to the problem of the homeless.