Manchester Homeless Initiatives Director
Schonna Green
‘We
want to make sure we do it the right way,’ says Schonna Green,
Manchester’s director of homeless initiatives, about the city’s outreach
and programs. (Photo by John Angelo)
Celebration is at the heart of what drives Schonna Green, director of homeless initiatives for the city of Manchester. She stepped into the newly created position in April, one expected to effectively address the needs of Manchester’s homeless population with the help of existing city programs, the local business community, other nonprofits, communities of faith and homeless folks themselves.
For 21 years, Green was director of Florida’s M.I.S.S. Inc. of the Treasure Coast, which she founded with a $7,000 grant. It now provides services and housing for 140 people, including mothers who are heads of households, senior women and people with mental health and/or substance abuse problems.
Q. What are your first impressions of New Hampshire?
A.
I love this state. I want to see everything and go everywhere. During
my last 14-hour leg driving up from Florida in April, I went through
rain, sleet, sludge and snow. At first I thought, “I brought it with
me,” but then I said, “I’m here!”
Q. Your high energy level feels both genuine and impressive. What motivates you?
A. We’re
born with a mission, and the key is to find it. I’m from a military
family. We don’t give up. I have much to offer, and I still have much to
do. In dealing with people who are homeless, it’s important that you
have faith,
because that is where you are going to go to be filled up. You’re
constantly getting depleted when you’re working with so many people who
are oppressed. You always have to find the positive within it.
Q. Specifically, how can the Manchester business community help you?
A.
Expertise as it relates to local business. The business community
obviously has the wherewithal, and I think it has ideas and opinions
that maybe we need to try. I don’t want to just say money — you can’t
just keep throwing money at this. You have to throw a real solution, and
I believe that solution-driven conversations need to happen, and not
just from the people deemed experts on service delivery, but from the
experts in the business community. It’s got to be a cohesive approach.
Q. What do most of us not understand about homelessness?
A.
In understanding the homeless, we have the financial issue and the lack
of affordable housing. And then we have the special-needs homeless that
have layers and layers of other issues, whether it’s mental health,
drug addiction or domestic violence. I think we all need to be
compassionate when it comes to services and deliver to anybody who is
homeless or unhoused — because at any time, given the right weather
condition or incorrect circumstance, we could be a paycheck or two away
ourselves. The housing provides the box in which to put all of that mess
so it’s not visible to the public, but because we don’t have the shell,
we’re bearing witness to it on the street. The lack of affordable
housing affects everyone. Homelessness is on this side and the housing
shortage is on this side. There’s a fine line between a humanitarian
approach to homelessness, and “we don’t want to see it.” The middle road
is the hardest road to walk.
Q.
The HOPE program (Housing Options Promote Empowerment for All People and
Incomes) that you’re rolling out has several unique features.
A.
Unite Us New Hampshire (sponsored by the New Hampshire Department of
Health and Human Services) will provide a networking forum so that
clients can be directed to the specific services they need. Referrals
will be more accurate, and services delivered and the outcomes of those
services will be transparent to all network organizations. A QR code
that can be captured on a cellphone will help a person electronically
apply for the services he or she needs.
The outreach that’s going
on in Manchester is phenomenal, but we need to look at it a different
way. We want to make sure we do it the right way.
Q. Is there anything else you’d like to add?
A.
There is no way anyone should be building without 5% to 10% devoted to
affordable housing or making a donation. Florida’s Sadowski Affordable
Housing Act gives 10 cents per thousand dollars of real estate stamp tax
transactions to a trust that develops affordable housing. It’s not on
me, but I’d like to see that here … Don’t assume we don’t know how to
fix problems in our city. We have to be hopeful that the city can come
together, that it can effect change. Never ever forget that the city is
yours.