Helping the homeless: How the 91快播 educates on the issue through action
Students and staff from the 91快播 put the words of the university鈥檚 mission statement 鈥 setbe 鈥渢o serve鈥 鈥 into practice at the College of Liberal Arts and Social Science鈥檚 annual Feed the Homeless event in November. At the event, volunteers from CLASS, the , the , and the handed out meals, toiletries, and snack bags to the homeless outside of the Guam Congress Building.
鈥淲e recognized the increase in homelessness, and you see more families out on the streets, and we wanted to come out into the community and do something directly for the people,鈥 Sharleen Santos-Bamba, associate dean of CLASS, said.
Feed the Homeless is just one of many homeless outreach programs the University is involved with, according to Margaret Hattori-Uchima, dean of UOG鈥檚 School of Health, who is also a board member of the and co-chair and founding member of the Coalition鈥檚 Health Care Committee for the Homeless.
鈥淪ince UOG is part of the island community, we really feel that we need to give back to the community,鈥 she said.
Last semester, Hattori-Uchima said UOG volunteers distributed mosquito nets and repellent to homeless families after Dengue fever was introduced to the island, assisted at the 鈥檚 annual Medical Mission, and collected countless donations for those in need.
鈥淲e鈥檝e gotten so many clothes from UOG families and the outside community that at every event we鈥檒l bring clothing and allow the homeless individuals to select clothes that they need,鈥 Hattori-Uchima said.
The information collected is shared with the Department of Housing & Urban Development鈥檚 Homelessness Data Exchange in order to help Guam secure federal funding to assist the local homeless community.
The University has been a leading partner in conducting the count since 2009, Hattori-Uchima said, with an average attendance of 40 to 60 student and faculty volunteers. In 2015, the University represented 37% of the total volunteer force with 78 volunteers, Hattori-Uchima said. Additionally, senior students often act as team leads because of the field training they鈥檝e received from the University.
Through volunteer opportunities such as these, UOG students positively impact the community while learning important lessons on citizenship and academia.
鈥淥ne lesson we want to impress upon the students is that when they see someone in need, we do something to help 鈥 it may not be feeding the homeless, but something toward helping others get back on their feet,鈥 Santos-Bamba said.
Heather Garrido, major and president of the UOG Sociology Club, and Natasha Suba, senior major and president of the Political Science Student Association, related their experience at the Feed the Homeless event back to their UOG studies.
individual problems, but it鈥檚 really systemic problems,鈥 Garrido said.
鈥One lesson we want to impress upon the students is that when they see someone in need, we do something to help 鈥 it may not be feeding the homeless, but something toward helping others get back on their feet.鈥 鈥 Associate Dean Sharleen Santos-Bamba
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important 鈥 in regards to political science 鈥 that you take care of your community because your community is your body of people, that鈥檚 who you want to bring up, that鈥檚 who you take care of. This is something we need to do. A lot of times we forget the people who don鈥檛 have as much as we do, so this is a way of giving back,鈥 Suba said.
Students, faculty, or staff interested in assisting with this year鈥檚 Guam Homeless Point-in-Time Count can contact Dr. Margaret Hattori-Uchima by phone at (671) 735-2650/2651 or email muchima@triton.uog.edu