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Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

D'Asian Hardy is 19 years old and a transgender man, she has been thrown out of her house in Westbuy Long Island. All she will tell me is that she and her mom do not get along.

D'Asian Hardy is 19 years old and a transgender man, she has been thrown out of her house in Westbuy Long Island. All she will tell me is that she and her mom do not get along.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

Michael Alvarado photographed on the streets of NYC for the Do 1Thing project. Michael who was brought up in his grandparents house after his mother was put in Jail when he was 8 years old. Now at 19 he has been asked to leave their house and find his own way in the world. He has a year and a half old daughter but has nowhere to live right now.

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Carolyn Garrard, public relations director, for Covenant House Houston explains that their kids want to wear all the same labels and brands that other teens wear. So the donations that aren’t age-appropriate, either for small children or older adults, go to other shelters. “Nothing ever goes to waste around here,” said Garrard.

Of course, the many men’s suits that have been donated today are especially appreciated by the residents for job interviews.

In between unloading the big laundry hampers, residents have been stuffing packets with Covenant House information.

Curtis checks out donated menswear.  (Photo by Smiley N. Pool)

Curtis checks out donated menswear. (Photo by Smiley N. Pool)

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teens2girlscouts2mrsnj1 It was a full house for the Program Presentation at The Covenant House in Newark NJ. We heard about the history of The Heart Gallery and how Do1Thing came to be. We saw the amazing videos posted on the site and got to hear the stories from the actual kids themselves. Miss New Jersey herself was here in the flesh signing autographs and supporting the cause. The kids were delighted to meet her. People young and old, from near and far gave their support, even the local girl scouts.

~SM

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2.14
09

Be Mine : )

valentine

The kids are certainly showing their Valentine’s Day Spirit in all the beautiful decorations around The Covenant House.

~SM

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Just past the crack of dawn several days a week, Pim Van Hemmen can be seen running at a good clip through Fair Haven. But he’s running a little faster than usual these days as he heads back to his third-floor home office.

Do1thing_screenshot “I have a certain amount of anxiety about this,” he says. “For about an hour each day, I freak out that I’m not making any money for the first time in my life.”

He’s not making any money because he recently took a buyout from his 25-year employer, the rapidly shrinking Star-Ledger, where he headed the newsroom photo and online efforts, and hasn’t yet turned his full attention to a photography business he plans to launch.

And what’s keeping him from the startup is Do1Thing.org, a national non-profit he co-founded to call attention to teenage homelessness.

Tomorrow, Valentine’s Day, dozens of Do1Thing professional photographers, videographers, writers and editors — including a passel of Pulitzer Prize winners — will fan out across America’s large cities looking to document, in images and words, the plight of kids who’ve been kicked to the curb.

One of the short videos on the Do1Thing site.

How does a surburban dad and husband go from a successful career in photojournalism to an all-consuming unpaid role as advocate for some of America’s neediest?

“It all started with the Heart Gallery project,” says Van Hemmen.

Founded by Van Hemmen and Najlah Feanny Hicks, a photographer for Newsweek and other newsmagazines, the Heart Gallery of New Jersey was a photography-based effort aimed at raising awareness of foster-children’s issues and boosting the adoptability of foster kids.

How? By a simple but transformative act: replacing the ugly mugshots used by the state agencies with photos that showed the kids as they really were.

Since 2005, the Heart Gallery has helped place 150 kids into permanent homes, says Van Hemmen. Many of them had spent their entire lives in the foster care system. Some were considered unadoptable.

“We think that the Heart Gallery helped to find them permanent homes and stable familes,” Van Hemmen says.

The success of that effort led Hicks and Van Hemmen to ponder what happens to foster kids who become young adults without being adopted.

Answer: they “age out” of the system, and are set loose into the world on their own.

Each year, 25,000 foster kids in America age out, and about a quarter of them end up on the streets, says Van Hemmen.

“It shouldn’t be that way,” he says. “It doesn’t have to be that way.”

Hicks and Van Hemmen decided to amp up the Heart Gallery approach. Wouldn’t it make sense, they asked, to have professional photographers take quality pictures to document and shine a light on an often overlooked problem?

In five months, Van Hemmen and Hick, recruited 100 top-notch photographers and other media pros in 20 cities across the country.

“We have 30 Pulitzer prize-winning photographers who have been and will be taking their best shots of homeless teens to show who they are and why they live the way they do” on Feb. 14, says Van Hemmen.

“Then we’ll put these pictures and videos on our interactive website so that people, everyone, can see their hardship and do something about it.”

Van Hemmen and Hicks partnered with Covenant House, the largest non-profit organization in the country dedicated to helping homeless teens through facilities in Newark, Atlantic City, New York and other cities across the country.

“What most of us don’t realize is that there are nearly a million teens and young adults out there in this country who are homeless — homeless,” says Van Hemmen. “The foster system takes care of them until they are 18, and then they age out, they’re on their own. They don’t have a support system. We can try to help them, and Covenant House will be the link for us.”

By coincidence, Covenant House’s new president is another Fair Haven resident, former New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services commissioner Kevin Ryan. He and Van Hemmen live just blocks apart, and each has a child in the nearby Sickles School, though the two men have only met in passing.

Ryan tells redbankgreen he’s “elated” that Hicks and Van Hemmen chose to focus on Covenant House’s work.

“Do1Thing is taking the most disempowered and voiceless kids and young adults — whether they’re living under the boardwalk in Atlantic City or in a box in public park or train station — and inviting the world to pay attention and do something about it,” he says.

“What they’re doing reminds me so much of what the Heart Gallery did: creating a moving portrait of kids using the gift of professional photography to depict our kids and help them get adopted by forever families.”

And what about that income Van Hemmen is supposed to be generating for his family? His wife, Jeanne-Marie, an attorney in Red Bank, is patient.

“Can we afford to do this, live on one salary? I don’t know,” she says. “But in the big picture, it’s really cool that someone, my husband, in the middle of a successful career, is stepping out and doing something more meaningful than making money.”

Do1Thing isn’t solely about the efforts of media professionals. Organizers hope many Americans will take notice of the teen homelessness issue.

Tomorrow, in particular, they’re hoping people will donate money or items that teens might need by bringing them to the organization’s Newark office. The public’s outreach will be documented in the photography and writing effort, says Van Hemmen.

Pictures and video taken tomorrow will be uploaded to the Do1Thing website. Updates will also be available on the group’s Facebook page.

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bedroomhallsfriendly We had our first tour of The Covenant House in Newark NJ. The building is fairly a new addition. We were led around by the friendly staff who told us about their responsibilities with the kids.

It was not only interesting but extremely enlightening to discover all of the tasks these people have to juggle. They are not only employees of The Covenant House but also mentors, teachers, friends, providers and so much more. Their responsibilities include cooking for the kids, teaching them how to interview, providing them with the appropriate attire, and even extending themselves to connect on a personal level to help the kids discover their potential. The most amazing part is that many of them are volunteers.

~SM

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crowdturnout2

I have to say, it is an absolutely amazing day here at The Covenant House in Newark NJ. As one of Najlah’s classmates I have seen what she can do and truly experienced the power of making change. I originally volunteered here to help out a fellow classmate but the added benefits to helping such a cause are astronomical. I have finally gotten a chance to meet the persons behind the faces in the images and videos on do1thing.org. These kids are amazing and their appreciation for the help they have received has been heart wrenching to witness.

As individuals we tend to think that we can’t ever make a difference. Do1thing is a perfect example of how one simple idea thought up by one individual can spiral into a life changing movement. I am truly amazed and grateful to be a part of it.

It is Valentine’s day and I am sitting next to my significant other blogging about the events we have seen here today. It is such a wonderful opportunity to take a day that is dedicated to being with the one you love and sharing that love with those who don’t know it exists. It’s important to realize that events such as this aren’t just a way to decrease the statistics of homeless teens. Through witnessing the stories of these kids today I realize more than ever, that we can change their lives. If everyone  just took the time to let just one new person into their hearts, big things can happen.

~Stephanie Mendolia (Parsons Student)

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My initial take on the homeless was likely the same as most of the general public’s; the grizzled, alcoholic old man begging for change while slumped on a corner in NYC with a dirty styrofoam cup.   So when my girlfriend Stephanie (who is in the same thesis class as Najlah at Parsons School of Design) told me about the Do1Thing event that would be followed by a “homeless prom,” my first reaction was laughter. “A homeless prom?” I asked with bemused disbelief.  I pictured those same grizzled old men slow dancing in a dimly lit high school auditorium a la “Napoleon Dynamite.”

Being the good boyfriend that I am, I agreed to go with Steph to the Covenant House to support her fellow thesis student who was obviously part of a great cause (albeit one that I did not yet fully grasp).  We made the drive over to Newark from safe, comfortable little Hoboken armed with video cameras and computers with which to record our experiences, all the while completely unsure of what to expect.  What we immediately found were beaming, friendly people who were genuinely happy to see us.  We were whisked into the main area where we got settled and had a bite to eat, after which we were given a tour of the Covenant House facilities.

I had no idea how many kids and young adults are literally homeless.  I was instantly embarrassed at my new realization, and it hit me hardest when I saw the Covenant House’s dorms.  When I was 19 and in college dorms, becoming homeless wasn’t even on my mind.  The due date of my sociology paper, what party I was going to attend that weekend, and whether or not they were serving tater tots that night in the ‘caf were the biggest quandaries I faced.  There are kids whose bedrooms are under the boardwalk in Atlantic City and beneath bridges in Newark. There are teenage mothers who have been constantly abused in ways I can’t even imagine and who have nowhere to go.  I’ve never felt so ashamed for taking my life for granted or so lucky for what I have been blessed with. I left my comfort zone to learn something new and to donate my unused items and time, and I’m grateful to be able to do it.

These kids are going to have their first full-out prom tonight (the prom that I laughed at) thanks to Kathleen O’Donnell-Pickert and hundreds of donations of suits and dresses from thoughtful individuals. And thanks to Naj, Do1Thing, and the Covenant House, I’m gladly eating my words.

-Tim Roche

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Miss Exclusive 2008 poses outside Covenant House in Newark.  The Charmin in the window was donated.

Miss Exclusive 2008 poses outside Covenant House in Newark. The Charmin in the window was donated.

A load of pink bags, escorted by two pretty girls from Seton Hall, one of them wearing a banner — Miss Exclusive, 2008 and a silver tiara, of course, are here to check out the community outreach opportunities at Covenant House in Newark, N.J. The Miss Exclusive Pageant holds a beauty pageant event each year. But don’t just think they are all beauties and no brains, says Miyokee, who was crowned at the current Miss Exclusive.

The organization, besides finding the next Miss Exclusive, prides itself on building the self esteem of young girls, says Cathy, a tall, pretty young woman, sporting oversized pink glasses. “We invite high school girls to participate, encouraging them to meet other young girls who are doing something positive with their lives,” says Cathy.

Miyokee, who was rather shy at first, chimes in. “It’s about empowering young girls, helping them believe that there is nothing they can’t do.”

And that includes taking away the crown  from Miyokee.

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Did you know that 1.3 million people under 21 live on the streets or in shelters? That’s why services for homeless teens are so needed, and why Do1Thing wants to bring attention to these children in need.

Here at Covenant House in Houston, donations continue to come in. More toiletries and clothes have arrived, along with a big pile of sofa pillows. The San Jacinto Girl Scout troop 3599, clad in badge-covered vests, are working hard, waving in vans, cars and trucks to the unloading zone. Everyone gets a red heart lollipop as a thank-you.

The first tour just finished, and as she was leaving one of the ladies, commented, “I’m so glad to know this is here.”

Services provided by Covenant House to youth under 21 include:

  • Shelter designed to teach independent living
  • Medical care, such as physical exams, HIV/AIDS testing and referrals to specialists
  • Counseling, bible studies and other support
  • Life skills training, such as budgeting and interviewing skills
  • GED classes, tutoring and vocational training
  • Six months of after-care for youth who transition to independent living
A resident sits on the porch as volunteers wait for donations.  (Photo by Smiley N. Pool)

A resident sits on the porch as volunteers wait for donations. (Photo by Smiley N. Pool)

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