WHAT WE DO

You Lift Up Adults, Children and
Our Community

Lifting Up Westchester supports people in our community experiencing a crisis in their lives resulting in their becoming unhoused or unable to meet their basic needs. We provide the support they need to strengthen the foundation necessary to rebuild their lives. Each year, we change the lives of over 2,500 men, women, and children living in Westchester County.

You Lift Up Adults

Lifting Up Westchester envisions a community where everyone has a stable place to call home. We believe that housing is the foundation on which a person’s well-being and advancement is built. With secure housing, we have the ability to focus on improving our health, education, and employment. Our team helps people find a home, build on that foundation, and achieve greater self-sufficiency.

When we uplift the most vulnerable in our community, we all rise! 

Homelessness is not just people living on the street, it is a lack of affordable, stable, and secure accommodation – the lack of a home.

Homelessness can be both visible and hidden. Visible homelessness includes the people you see on the street and those you see in our shelters.  Hidden homelessness includes “couch surfing” – staying with friends or in overcrowded spaces with family members with no expectation of permanency or those living in their cars or another inadequate shelter.

The length of time for which people experience homelessness varies considerably. Even temporary homelessness can be extremely damaging to health and well-being, and the negative consequences increase the longer people experience homelessness.

I found it impossible to find an affordable place to live on my fixed income. I had no other family to fall back on, no one who could prop me up until I got back on my feet. Before I knew it, I found myself on the doorsteps of Samaritan House Women’s Shelter wondering, “How did I get here?”

I was terrified but I had no other choice. I needed a safe space to rest my head.

CLICK TO READ THE REST OF
CECILIA’S STORY

You Lift Up Children

Chronic stressful conditions such as extreme poverty, homelessness, and abuse — what scientists now call “toxic stress” — can alter the architecture of the developing brain. Exposure to multiple stressors without strong support systems to compensate can have detrimental effects on children. This can lead to lifelong difficulties in learning, memory, and self-regulation.

All children grow up in an environment of relationships that affects all aspects of their development. Healthy development also depends on the quality and reliability of a child’s relationship with adults. The support and interaction of trusted adults shape a child’s brain circuits and can affect academic performance and interpersonal skills later in life. Parents with children experiencing homelessness face multiple stressors themselves and often do not have the wherewithal to provide the support, and stability needed to build a solid developmental foundation for their children.

While every individual or family has their own unique circumstances for experiencing homelessness, people living in poverty are at the highest risk of homelessness because they are already in precarious financial positions and are particularly vulnerable to rising housing costs, unemployment, and unexpected costs and emergencies. While these individuals experience stressful situations like all of us, they are particularly susceptible to more difficult outcomes that can destabilize familial relationships and lead to mental health problems including substance misuse, all of which are risk factors for homelessness.

When families do not have this basic foundation for well-being, it becomes difficult for the adults in the family to offer the support and resources that children need today. Layered on to this are often barriers like language skills, working multiple jobs and still not making a living wage, self-medicating to reduce insurmountable stress, mental illness, and incarceration.

We know that children living in poverty and experiencing homelessness who are exposed to high-quality academic enrichment programs with quality and reliable tutors and the encouragement of caring mentors show long-term academic and learning skills improvements. This gives them the greatest chance to break out of the cycle of poverty.

Ensuring that these children can access high-quality, education programs with consistent, highly trained staff will build these brain connections and result in positive outcomes in their later ability to learn as well.

The future prosperity of any society depends on its ability to foster the health and well-being of the next generation.

When a society invests wisely in children, the next generation will pay back through a lifetime of productivity and responsible citizenship. We either support these children now when we have the best chance to build a strong foundation or pay later when they may need even greater and more costly support.

Last winter, Sofia fled from Venezuela with her mother and younger sister due to deteriorating living conditions and rising crime in her neighborhood.

Because of the generosity of our donors, Sofia was able to receive a camp scholarship and attend our Brighter Futures Summer Camp. She spent four weeks playing kickball, swinging from the monkey bars, splashing in the pool, and making memories. Camp gave her a brief respite from her troubles at home and allowed her to just have fun.

Sofia doesn’t speak much English but that didn’t stop her from making friends… all of the campers liked her. Perhaps it was because she was always smiling.

Click here to read the rest of Sophia’s story

You Lift Up Our Community

“Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.”

These seven words, written by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. more than a half-century ago reflect a timeless truth: people’s fates are interwoven, through threads both visible and invisible, tangible and intangible.

We, humans, depend on each other to live, learn, and grow.

Westchester only prospers when all communities in it prosper.

That’s why we need to make sure that all of our Westchester communities have the critical resources they need, like safe, stable housing that people can afford.  If we do, more people will have healthier, more successful lives, and it will benefit our whole County.

When we make housing more sustainable with the right support, we are preventing homelessness and making our entire community stronger.

 Help us make Westchester a vibrant community that benefits all residents.