Sunday, February 10, 2013

Washington Post. 600 homeless children in D.C., and no one seems to care


I don’t care what we call our football team. I don’t care about Lance Armstrong’s doping or RGIII’s knee, or whether Notre Dame linebackerManti Te’o knew his dead girlfriend never existed in the first place, or any of the other sports dramas we’ve spent gobs of energy on in these past few weeks.
Here’s what we ought to be talking about: 600 kids. The District has set a dubious new record for the number of homeless kids crammed inside a scary, abandoned hospital that serves as the city’s makeshift family homeless shelter.
There are about 600, according to a nightly census done by the Community Partnership for the Prevention of Homelessness.
Stop and think about that. Six hundred kids with chubby cheeks and Spider-Man sneakers and Dora hats are beginning their journey in life on an army cot in a cafeteria or an old hospital bed in a city shelter. And that’s an improvement from the time they spent sleeping in cars, bus shelters, Metro stations, apartment-house lobbies or on a different couch every night.
This, of course, is happening in the same city now rolling in a $417 million budget surplus and on track for a $240 million surplus in the coming year.
The last time anyone agonized about a capacity crowd at the D.C. General shelter, it was two years ago and there were about 200 kids there. Where have 400 more homeless kids come from, and who are these families?
There’s Alexia Sullivan, 23, who was a full-time student at Howard University until her life fell apart. She had a baby, and her tuition increased but her scholarships didn’t. She lost her apartment trying to keep up and has been in the shelter with her 1-year-old for two weeks.
And there’s Kevin Cruz, 29, who has been at D.C. General with his wife and baby since Thanksgiving. They’ve been homeless since July, when McDonald’s cut Cruz’s hours until he couldn’t afford his apartment and his wife’s part-time work at Wal-Mart didn’t provide benefits when she had their child.
They didn’t get an emergency cot until that magic number — 32 degrees — signaled the start of hypothermia season and a District law kicked in that mandates emergency shelter for anyone in the winter.
Or there’s another family, too embarrassed to let me use their names. They have a kid in college up in Maine and five younger ones at home — which is now a tiny room in the family shelter.
You think getting a spot at the shelter means a walk on Easy Street? A place for the lazy to get three hots and a cot on the government dime?
No way. This is the place of desperation.
The intake process at the Virginia Williams Family Resource Center on Rhode Island Avenue can make it feel harder to get a spot in the shelter than a seat on Air Force One.
The Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, whose lawyers spend endless days and late nights wrangling beds for the city’s homeless, issued a report this week on the District’s handling of this growing crisis.
“Of course the root of the whole problem is the severe shortage of affordable housing for low-income families,” said legal clinic lawyer Marta Beresin, who wants “an emergency shelter system for families that you don’t need a lawyer to navigate.”



Sullivan said shelter officials wanted a list of everyone she’s lived with in the past three years before they’d let her and her baby in while it was snowing outside. So she gave them that and the intake counselors called those people — be they abusive boyfriends or angry landlords — “no less than 20 times.”
Sullivan was lucky. After all those calls, she was given an army cot in the old hospital cafeteria, partitioned off with temporary walls that don’t reach the ceilings, MASH unit style.


No, this is not a world full of innocents. The D.C. General shelter is a showcase of bad decisions, social ills and generations of defeat.
Outside I met Asia Brown, who at 19 has more children than I do. Her 5-year-old hasn’t been in school since she got to the shelter in January. She’s waiting for paperwork to let him
(Petula Dvorak/The Washington Post) - Elayshia Brown (left), 6 months, shares a stroller for warmth with another baby living in the District's shelter for homeless families on Friday. Elayshia's mother, Asia Brown, lost her apartment in January and wound up in the abandoned hospital, where a record of nearly 600 children are now being housed.
 go to a nearby school on Capitol Hill. She also has a 2-year-old and a 6-month-old, who was squeezed into a stroller, sharing warmth with another homeless 2-month-old under a pink-yellow-and-blue baby blanket. Babies having babies.
Brown wants to get her GED and go to college, she told me. I hope she can make it, but the odds are against her.
Who pays if she doesn’t succeed? The poor kids, and the taxpayers who will have to pick up the pieces of their broken lives.
It’s almost like some bizarre “Hunger Games” alternate reality. You go 17 blocks from the Capitol, from the spot where the world went haywire because Beyonce lip-synced the national anthem, and there are cold children playing on trash-strewn concrete, fathers who can’t find work and mothers who can’t find hope.
It’s like Cindy Adams’s vision of the “crapital” come to life, and all we want to do is celebrate all the nice new restaurants and condos downtown. And look! We have cool red bikes!
These children didn’t ask to be homeless. This city needs to take ownership of this problem, come together and figure out how we can help these 600 young souls. They are an asset far more precious than any sports franchise, whatever its name.
Follow me on Twitter at @petulad. To read previous columns, go to washingtopost.com/dvorak.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Deadline for GWUL Scholarship Applications Is February 11

 
High school seniors in the District of Columbia, Prince George's County or Montgomery County may be eligible to apply for Greater Washington Urban League scholarships. 

The GWUL and its partners are offering 20 one-time scholarships of $2,000 each for a student's first year in college. Partners include Safeway, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, General Dynamics, Pepsi Beverages Company, and the GWUL Alumni Group. 

Thirteen of the scholarships are reserved for children of wounded or deceased veterans. In addition, the GWUL offers a four-year $8,000 scholarship ($2,000 each year) in partnership with the Charlotte Elizabeth Yancey Eights Trust. For more information and the scholarship packet, go to www.gwul.org. If you have questions, please contact GWUL Education Director Audrey Epperson on 202-265-8200, Ext. 255.
 
 
 
The Greater Washington Urban League
Headquarters Building | Executive Office | 2901 14th Street, NW | Washington, DC 20009
(202) 265-8200 | (202) 265-6122 (Fax) | LUWGDBS@aol.com

Internship Opportunity: Summer 2013 NIH


Summer programs at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) offer hundreds of exciting opportunities for high school students to work side-by-side with some of the world's leading scientists in an environment devoted exclusively to biomedical research. 

“If you have a passion for science and an interest in gaining hands-on experience doing biomedical, behavioral, or social science research, the NIH Summer Internship Program may be perfect for you,” explained Dr. Sharon Milgram, director of the NIH Office of Intramural Training and Education.  
As one of the premiere research facilities in the world, NIH consists of the 240-bed Hatfield Clinical Research Center and more than 1200 laboratories/research projects located on the main campus in Bethesda, as well as in Frederick and Baltimore, MD; Research Triangle Park, NC; Phoenix, AZ; Hamilton, MT; Framingham, MA; and Detroit, MI.  

Program stipends cover a minimum of eight weeks, with students generally arriving at the NIH in May or June. And stipends are adjusted yearly with the amount depending on prior experience and educational level.
 
Note that this is a commuter program; NIH does not provide housing to student interns. Every year, however, out-of-area students apply and make their own living arrangements for the summer. Nevertheless, students living in the DC metropolitan area or near one of the other locations have a clear advantage for many of the internships.
 
To support the program, the NIH Institutes and Office of Intramural Training & Education sponsor a wide range of summer activities including lectures featuring distinguished NIH investigators, career/professional development workshops, and Summer Poster Day.
 
These are incomparable opportunities which can provide the basis for independent research and related science competitions such as the JSHS, Intel STS, Siemens, and ISEF.
 
Summer internships are available for students who will be 16 years of age or older at the time they begin the program and who are currently enrolled at least half-time in high school or an accredited US college or university. Students who have already been accepted to college may also apply.
 
Interested students must apply online by no later than March 1, 2013 (11:59 EST), and all letters of recommendation are due by March 15, 2013. The application requires
  • a resume
  • a list of coursework and grades
  • a cover letter describing research interests and career goals, and
  • the names and contact information for two references. 
Candidates are welcome to specify the scientific methodologies or disease/organ systems that are of particular interest to them.  
Because applications are reviewed on a rolling basis from November through April by NIH scientists, students are encouraged to submit their applications as soon as possible.
 
Only completed applications are available for review by NIH investigators and administrators. And be aware that in 2012, more than 6600 completed applications were submitted, and about 1100 interns were selected.
 
For more information as well as tips on how to increase your chances of winning an internship, visit the NIH website.
 

Internship Opportunities: Summer Internship Programs


http://www.examiner.com/topic/summer-internship-program/articles


 NIH summer internships for students with a 'passion for science'
Summer Internship ProgramFebruary 1, 2013
Summer programs at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) offer hundreds of exciting opportunities for high school students to work side-by-side...

GMU's 'Aspiring Scientists Summer Internship Program' promotes student research
Summer Internship ProgramJanuary 21, 2013
Once again, the George Mason University Aspiring Scientists Summer Internship Program (ASSIP) is seeking high school students with a passion for...


2013 summer internships for high school students
Summer Internship Program  December 26, 2012
Internships provide incredible opportunities for high school students to gain significant work experience and make decisions about future career...

A tale of two 'Science & Engineering Apprenticeship Programs'
Summer Internship ProgramDecember 15, 2012
This is the tale of two “Science & Engineering Apprenticeship Programs.” Once upon a time, there was a single Science &...
Read more ....

The Generation Google Scholarship. Deadline March 11, 2013


HS SENIORS INTERESTED IN COMPUTER SCIENCE - GENERATION GOOGLE SCHOLARSHIP - DUE MAR. 11th
As part of Google's ongoing commitment to advancing computing and technology, we are pleased to provide scholarships to encourage students to excel in their studies and become active role models and leaders. We hope these programs will also help in dismantling barriers that keep women and minorities from entering computing and technology fields. 
The Generation Google Scholarship was established for aspiring computer scientists to excel in technology and become active role models and leaders in the field. Selected students will receive 10,000 USD (for those studying in the US) or 5,000 CAD (for those studying in Canada) for the 2013-2014 school year. As part of the scholarship, recipients will be required to attend Google’s Computer Science Summer Institute (CSSI) in the summer of 2013.

Who can apply?

Applicants must be high school seniors and meet the following eligibility criteria:
  • Intend to be enrolled in or accepted as a full-time student at a university in the US or Canada for the 2013-2014 school year.
  • Intend to be enrolled in or accepted for enrollment in a baccalaureate Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Software Engineering, or related program.
  • Exemplify leadership and demonstrate a commitment to and passion for computer science and technology through involvement in his/her community.
  • Exhibit a strong record of academic achievement.
  • Be a student from an underrepresented group in computer science (African American, Hispanic, American Indian, Female, or a Person with a Disability).
  • Be available to attend Google’s Computer Science Summer Institute (CSSI) in the summer of 2013.
  • Demonstrate financial need.

Application process

Please complete the online application.
You will also be asked to submit the following in order to have a complete application:
  • Online application (includes contact information, intended university, leadership information)
  • Academic transcripts (from your high school)
  • Two letters of reference:
    • One letter of reference must be from a high school teacher in a STEM (science, technology, engineering, or mathematics) field familiar with the applicant's academic work.
    • The second letter of reference must be from a person who has known the applicant for two or more years and is not a relative.
  • Responses to essay questions
Deadline to apply: Monday, March 11, 2013.
View our additional Terms and Conditions for this scholarship.
Questions? Email generationgoogle@google.com.
 

RECOMMENDED READING LIST

Search This Blog

ARCHIVE List 2011 - Present