We are located in Gales Ferry, and serve all of southeastern Connecticut. We give beds to people who are experiencing financial hardship, including, for example, victims of fire, flood, and bedbug infestations, single parents, immigrants, victims of domestic abuse, young military families and veterans, individuals with AIDS or mental health problems, the elderly, and the formerly homeless. Beds are purchased new, using funds from grants, donations, and twice-yearly tag sales. We do ... Lire la suite
We are located in Gales Ferry, and serve all of southeastern Connecticut. We give beds to people who are experiencing financial hardship, including, for example, victims of fire, flood, and bedbug infestations, single parents, immigrants, victims of domestic abuse, young military families and veterans, individuals with AIDS or mental health problems, the elderly, and the formerly homeless. Beds are purchased new, using funds from grants, donations, and twice-yearly tag sales. We do not have an endowment.
We presently have 11 people, all volunteers, on our board of directors. More than 60 people volunteered during the past year to help with tag sales. There are no paid employees.
The people to whom we provide furniture are referred to us by over 60 state agencies, women’s shelters, churches, and other organizations that help people in need, usually in low-income areas of New London and Norwich. They are multiracial and multicultural, and always poor. We help them to establish decent living conditions for themselves and their families. Clean, quality bedding is among the most basic requirements for comfortable, healthy living conditions. We have provided beds for children who have been removed from their parents’ custody, eligible for return on condition that decent sleeping accommodations are available. We provide beds to people with serious health issues, who need decent bedding for their comfort or recovery. We provide people coming out of drug or alcohol recovery programs, homeless shelters, women’s shelters, or mental health programs with beds, and occasionally other furniture, important to their reinstatement as confident, productive members of society. We help victims of fire, flood, or bedbug infestations who have lost everything. We help young military families and veterans. We help immigrants to establish homes in their new country. We often help single parents struggling to provide their children with comfortable living conditions. Since its inception in 1982, we estimate that the furniture bank has helped over 21,000 people.
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