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* HPWC help individuals obtain and maintain employment and housing by reducing barriers, increasing employment skills, assisting with application processes, credit repair, tenant skills, and financial resources to secure housing.   +
A community health center that provides primary care, dental care, and other health services.  +
A shelter that provides temporary housing and services to people experiencing homelessness.  +
Another office of Immigration Counseling Services (ICS) that provides legal services to the immigrant community.  +
An office of a legal or social service organization located in Hillsboro, Oregon.  +
A temporary shelter site with pods for individuals experiencing homelessness.  +
A provider of holistic behavioral health services  +
Holistic Healing Behavioral Healthcare (HHBH) focuses on helping brown and black people get treatment that works for them. HHBH owns a house to provide supportive housing to the BIPOC recovery community. The house is located at 6515 NE Cleveland Avenue, sleeps nine, and costs $500 per month per residence. Requirements include 90 days of sobriety and employment.  +
Jamaica Imani-Nelson founded Holistic Healing Behavioral Healthcare (HHBH) to focus on helping brown and black people get treatment that works for them. All the counselors are BIPOC, so the clinicians look like the clients. HHBH provides integrated care for overall mental wellness. HHBH Master-level clinicians render mental health services through a trauma- informed, culturally responsive, and client-centered approach. Their theoretical orientation is rooted in family systems with an emphasis on Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT), and Crisis Intervention Therapy (CIT). HHBH provides level 2.1 intensive outpatient treatment for addiction, DUI services, mental health counseling, peer support, housing, gambling, and corrections reentry support. HHBH has experience working with the NWRRC and federal probation officers and has seen amazing outcomes for the men in their corrections reentry programs. HHBH helps clients reenter society after a long period of incarceration by addressing the challenges they face, including how to operate modern technology. HHBH owns a house to provide supportive housing to the BIPOC recovery community. The house is located at 6515 NE Cleveland Avenue, sleeps nine, and costs $500 per month per residence. Requirements include 90 days of sobriety and employment. '''Addiction''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/addiction/'' '''DUI''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/duii/'' '''Gambling''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/gambling/'' '''Mental Health''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/mental-health/'' '''Peer Support''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/peer-support/'' '''Corrections Reentry''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/corrections-reentry/''  +
Jamaica Imani-Nelson founded Holistic Healing Behavioral Healthcare (HHBH) to focus on helping brown and black people get treatment that works for them. All the counselors are BIPOC, so the clinicians look like the clients. HHBH provides integrated care for overall mental wellness. HHBH Master-level clinicians render mental health services through a trauma- informed, culturally responsive, and client-centered approach. Their theoretical orientation is rooted in family systems with an emphasis on Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT), and Crisis Intervention Therapy (CIT). HHBH provides level 2.1 intensive outpatient treatment for addiction, DUI services, mental health counseling, peer support, housing, gambling, and corrections reentry support. HHBH has experience working with the NWRRC and federal probation officers and has seen amazing outcomes for the men in their corrections reentry programs. HHBH helps clients reenter society after a long period of incarceration by addressing the challenges they face, including how to operate modern technology. HHBH owns a house to provide supportive housing to the BIPOC recovery community. The house is located at 6515 NE Cleveland Avenue, sleeps nine, and costs $500 per month per residence. Requirements include 90 days of sobriety and employment. '''Addiction''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/addiction/'' '''DUI''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/duii/'' '''Gambling''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/gambling/'' '''Mental Health''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/mental-health/'' '''Peer Support''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/peer-support/'' '''Corrections Reentry''' ''https://holistichealingbh.org/corrections-reentry/''  +
Low Income Rentals-Portland - Housing  +
Home Forward (previously the Housing Authority of Portland) is a public corporation serving all of Multnomah County, including the cities of Gresham, Fairview, Portland, and Troutdale, and other East County communities. As the largest provider of affordable housing in Oregon, Home Forward offers a variety of housing options to low-income individuals and families. Home Forward has a special responsibility to those who encounter barriers to housing because of income, disability, or special need.  +
A non-profit organization providing drop-in centers and street outreach for youth experiencing homelessness or housing instability.  +
A center offering a variety of recovery support services.  +
Hope Center Recovery and Premiere Sober Living provide high levels of accountability and supervision to clients in achieving and maintaining sobriety. Throughout the program, patients meet weekly with their primary counselor for one-on-one sessions and with their Psychiatric NP, Dr. Morales, for medication management and mental health assessments. Regular urine analysis (UAs) are conducted on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at the treatment center. The Hope Center Recovery Program treatment program spans 3-4 months and includes the following phases: '''Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP):''' 6 weeks of intensive treatment from 9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, with five daily group sessions covering CBT, DBT, Hero's Journey, Seeking Safety, Life Skills, Emotional Regulation, and Nonviolent Communication. '''Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP5):''' 4 weeks of treatment from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., allowing time for goal planning and pursuing employment or education in the afternoons. '''Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP3''' ): 2-4 weeks of treatment on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. '''Outpatient Program (OP):''' 2 weeks of treatment, one day a week, for a single group session, leading to graduation. '''Premiere Sober Living''' Patients reside in one of our four men's or two women's sober living houses, each with an on-site live-in house manager (Certified Recovery Mentor) to maintain a therapeutic and safe environment. Their sober living requirements include: * Meeting Attendance: Residents must attend three evening meetings per week (AA, NA, Refuge Recovery, etc.). * Chores: Scheduled chore days on Sunday and Thursday with assigned tasks. * House Meetings: Weekly house meetings on Sunday at 7 p.m. to set goals, address challenges, and discuss house grievances. * Curfew: 11 p.m. on weekdays and 1 a.m. on weekends. * Regular Testing: UAs and breathalyzer tests conducted by house managers.  +
Free or Reduced Fee Cultural Events - Art and Cultural Programs  +
A hygiene hub that provides unsheltered residents with access to showers, bathrooms, hygiene and medical supplies, clean clothing and bedding, and a space for community.  +
H4A’s team of sheltered and unsheltered staff has designed a place of community safety that offers an effective, healing response to the public health and sanitation crises brought by growing housing, wealth, and infrastructure gaps.” Hygiene for all offers 20-minute hot showers, hygiene supplies, medical supplies and first aid, clothing and bedding exchange, device charging, waste management, and “space for loving community.” The program hires unsheltered people to provide peers with hot showers and clean bathrooms, first aid supplies, and personal care products.  +
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A facility for storing the personal belongings of individuals experiencing homelessness.  +
A community-based organization that provides culturally specific mental health and substance abuse services, primarily for the African American community.  +