Gov’t partners with Hope charity to provide housing for homeless youth
KINGSTON, Jamaica — The Government is partnering with the Don and Ruby Morgan Hope Opportunity Charity Limited on an initiative aimed at assisting with housing for homeless, at-risk youth.
The charity, based in Jamaica, has provided an initial $1 million to kick-start the undertaking through the Housing, Opportunity, Production and Employment (HOPE) Programme.
National coordinator for the HOPE programme, Colonel Martin Rickman, said that several young people have already been identified for homes, and arrangements to facilitate construction are being finalised.
“We are in the process of getting the first one up and running in very short order,” he said.
The organisation, initially named Hope Opportunity Charity Limited, was registered in 2015 by Jamaican academic, Professor Donald Morgan and his wife, Ruby, who reside in Washington DC in the United States.
Its mission is grounded in facilitating the upliftment of marginalised and at-risk Jamaican youth by providing them with educational/vocational training and entrepreneurial opportunities and support, along with other tangible interventions.
Over the years, the charity has worked with social agencies, churches, business enterprises, institutions, among others in the pursuit of its mandate.
Col Rickman said the collaboration represents an expansion of support initially extended by the entity to the Government in 2018, which saw select HOPE participants accessing $75,000 each to assist with educational (skills training) or entrepreneurship activities.
The skills training, in collaboration with HEART Trust/NSTA, covers areas such as carpentry, masonry, plumbing, barbering, roofing, and cosmetology, among others.
Col Rickman explained that the $75,000 allocation goes towards financing inputs such as training materials for participants antransportation costs.
He noted that about 35 to 40 young people have been engaged to date.
He added, however, that Professor Morgan was keen on doing more, and following discussions with Prime Minister Andrew Holness, he decided to contribute a portion of the resources from this charity towards the homeless youth population in Jamaica.
“He wanted to do this as an example for others to follow,” Rickman said.
Col Rickman said the objective is not only to provide individuals with shelter “but get them to a point whereby we also give them training or entrepreneurship support through the HOPE Programme, thereby enabling them to pivot towards attaining self-sustainability”.
He said it is anticipated that the partnership forged with the Don and Ruby Hope Opportunity Charity Limited will be maintained for the foreseeable future.
“It is intended that they will continue to support young persons through the training and entrepreneurship engagements also, as we continue to identify those who are in need of somewhere to live.
“So everytime we come across these persons, we will endeavour to see how they can become beneficiaries of the programme in those regards,” he adds.
Professor Morgan, for his part, invites and encourages Jamaicans at home and in the diaspora to “contribute to the housing opportunity arm of the Prime Minister’s economic development programme”.
The HOPE Programme, which is the brainchild of Prime Minister Holness, is a training and apprenticeship programme for unattached youth, aged 18 to 24, across Jamaica.
It entails training in values and attitudes, inclusive of work ethics, citizenship, conflict resolution and other key areas such as life and personal development skills.
After training, participants are assigned to various industries in the public and private sectors, as part of the thrust to make them more employable and ready for the Jamaican workforce.
JIS