Florence House is a 31⁄2 story building in Portland, Maine, United States, named after Florence Young "a social worker who spent more than 20 years working at Preble Street."[1]
The building was created to help end homelessness. Florence House is based on the Housing First model, a strategy to help move women from homelessness to a permanent supportive home environment.
Florence House can house 50 or more former homeless women. The building includes 25 efficiency apartments, a safe-haven area with 15 semi-private spaces and 10 to 25 emergency shelter beds [2]
The $7.9 million facility was completed on April 6, 2009.[3] It was developed by Preble Street and Avesta Housing[4] and received state and federal funding[5] as well as private contributions.
The opening in April, 2009 (five years after the project started) was attended by Maine Governor John Baldacci, Shaun Donovan (Secretary of Housing and Urban Development — HUD),[6] Senator Olympia Snowe, Senator Susan Collins, Representative Chellie Pingree, and other dignitaries.
References
edit- ^ Florence Young Housing for Homeless Women In Portland Archived 2012-09-07 at archive.today, Preble Street Resources.
- ^ Anne Mostue, New Housing Project Aims to Open Doors for Portland's Homeless Women, Maine Public Broadcasting Network Archived 2011-06-14 at the Wayback Machine, June 4, 2010.
- ^ John Richardson, Florence House to Open Doors for Homeless Women, Portland Press Herald, April 5, 2010.
- ^ Avesta Housing.
- ^ Maine State Housing Authority Funding News.
- ^ Prepared Remarks for Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan at the Florence House Grand Opening, Housing and Urban Development (HUD), June 4, 2010.
Sources
edit- Florence House Gives Homeless Women a Second Chance Maine Insights, August 27, 2010.