Staff, Volunteers Busy Gearing Up for Project PATH’s Opening

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Cindi Jordensen, sleep center coordinator of Stepping Stones Alliance, left, and Jesalyn Cole , executive director of Stepping Stones Alliance, right, work on moving furniture from their old facility to the new sleep center April 23, 2024, at Project PATH in Hermiston. (Photos by Yasser Marte/East Oregonian)

Tuesday, April 23, was moving day for Project PATH, the transitional homeless shelter located in Hermiston.

Staff members and more than a dozen volunteers began bright and early moving beds, chairs, tables and other furniture into the Sleep Center.

“It’s been a busy morning,” said Jessica Cole, executive director of Stepping Stones Alliance, the nonprofit that is managing Project PATH.

The bunk beds have been placed aside to make way for the additional beds April 23, 2024, inside the sleeping center at Project PATH in Hermiston.

Project PATH is designed to provide Practical Assistance through Transitional Housing (PATH). The intent is to bring together services to assist individuals and families facing homelessness with the objective of moving them into and through transitional housing to permanent housing.

Project PATH is one of eight pilot projects selected by the state to develop services for the homeless. Each pilot project received $1 million from the state to develop the program. Stepping Stones Alliance received an additional $1.1 million in private and state funds for the project.

As part of its management responsibilities, Stepping Stones Alliance will provide 24-hour, seven-days a week onsite staffing to support the project buildings that include:

  • Offices
  • Resident showers
  • Food pantry
  • Community kitchen
  • 21 individual shelter units that will sleep one to two people

Cole said landscaping and some of the electrical work still needs to be completed but is hopeful the facilities will be ready sometime in May.

“Hopefully, in two to four weeks,” she said.

Cole said the Sleep Center is for people needing a place to stay on a night-to-night basis. The individual shelter units will be for those seeking assistance getting back on their feet and into a home of their own.

Among the services Stepping Stones Alliance will offer those folks are educational services including helping them earn their high school diploma or GED, counseling services to connect them with local or other traditional educational service providers (BMCC, EOU, and others), and connecting individuals with employer education services (such as CDL training, unemployment counselors, or workforce partnerships).

Those actively working toward independence will also have access to basic medical, dental, and vision services.

Construction crew work on the landscape April 23, 2024, at Project PATH in Hermiston.

Project PATH, located at 81535 Lind Road, will also provide transportation services to facilitate travel to work, educational programs, or other support services deemed necessary for the individual’s transition.

Services will also be available for persons with behavioral health conditions and/or substance use disorders.

Along with Cole, Project PATH has two other full-time positions – Navigation Center director and Sleep Center coordinator.

The Navigation Center will provide support services such as counseling, recovery services, technology resources, and ongoing education opportunities.

Project PATH is a partnership between Umatilla County, and the cities of Umatilla, Hermiston, Stanfield, and Echo.

The impetus for the project was a 2018 decision by the 9th Circuit Court in the case Martin v. Boise that ruled jurisdictions must provide a location for the homeless if community ordinances prohibit the homeless from camping in public places such as parks. In 2021, the Oregon Legislature made that ruling state law with a July 2023 deadline to implement a transitional housing program for the homeless.

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