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DIGNITY VILLAGE GRAND OPENING SET FOR MAY 3

Wednesday, March 22, 2023
Alameda Sun | Staff Reports

Courtesy Swinerton -- The Dignity Village supportive housing development will be ready for residents to move in after more than a year of planning and construction.

Dignity Village, the 47-unit interim supportive housing program, will host a Grand Opening event on Wednesday, May 3, at 10 am at the site, located at 2350 5th St. DignityMoves will be the project developer, the project developer, will begin moving people into the housing development sometime in April.

The plan to build a development for unhoused residents began more than a year ago. The Dignity Village concept were introduced at the Nov.16, 2021 City Council meeting, according to Alameda Mayor Marilyn Ezzy Ashcraft. The City of Alameda reported on Feb. 10, 2022, it had applied for a Project Homekey Round 2 grant to receive funding to build an interim housing development for the city’s unhoused community (“https://alamedasun.com/news/city-submits-grant-application-build-develop...,” Feb. 15, 2022).

In August 2021, when there was inclination a second round of Project Homekey would be offered, the city sent out a request for proposal to local entities seeking a developer, property manager and service provider for the development. After receiving several responses, the city opted to hire DignityMoves and Five Keys Schools and Programs as partners in the project. DignityMoves is the project developer and Five Keys handles operational services.

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Connection, Hope, Purpose, and Empowerment Define Travis Rapp’s Lived Experience Reentering the Community

 “It’s the everyday things, like being able to open a door, that bring me such joy.”

Like many people who are incarcerated, Travis Rapp struggled with anger, pain, and hopelessness during the 16 years he spent in a maximum security California prison, almost a decade in isolation.

Travis was 21 when he was charged with first-degree burglary and sentenced to 15 years at Kern Valley State Prison in Delano, CA,  “designed to house the worst-behaved, most problematic,” of all the state’s inmates. For nine years, he was confined to a 6.5-foot-by-11-foot room with just a bed, sink, and toilet. Meals were served through a slot. The exercise consisted of four hours a week in a gated dog-run-like cage in the outside yard.

Fast forward to today. Travis, 37, is just two years out of prison. He’s a lead supervisor for five of Five Keys’ employment and reentry crews, (about 50 employees) rising through the ranks from his first job on the CAL Crew, which works to repair, remove litter, control vegetation, repair storm damage and erosion and other highway beautification projects in Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Joaquin counties. He clocks in at 6:45 a.m. and out at 3:15 overseeing worker safety, the vans, hiring, data sheets, payroll and recruiting.

“Travis is a natural leader, a standup guy who is also humble and was not afraid to start at the bottom and work his way up,” said Jalonn Harrison, Assistant Director/Transitional Work Programs for Five Keys. “He’s stepped up to every opportunity and given his best.  He’s an amazing role model for all that a person can make it through anything. He’s all about the power of hard work and determination.”

In February he was released from parole.

Travis is married to Lenna, a hairstylist, who shares his passion for trekking through California highways on weekends on their motorcycles. They live in an apartment in West Los Angeles with their two cats, Brodie, and Bob Cat, and have a bucket list of travel plans from Greece to Japan, to France and around the globe. 

The first place he and his wife went upon his release from prison: The Claim Jumper restaurant “for a big old juicy steak.” He’s proud to say he’s taken up cooking, “mostly steaks,” he admits.

“But it’s the everyday things, like being able to open a door, that bring me such joy.”

His new adventure is all about taking risks and creating a dream life. But he doesn’t forget the suffering and longing that defined his years in prison.

As the years rolled by in prison, Travis was visited by the prison chaplain three times, each to tell him about the death of one of his grandparents. 

Travis studied and earned his General Educational Development (GED) degree, classes in Excel and Microsoft, trade school auto mechanics certificate, soaked up as much history as possible, books about Napoléon, the Saxons and jotted down motivational quotes that became his lifeline and guiding light:  “You gain strength through struggle,” and “In prosperity, our friends know us; in adversity, we know our friends.”

“I was a lifelong troublemaker who knew I had to turn my life around and that moving forward, the key would be who I surround myself with, he said.

Travis says he just kept telling himself: “Push forward, you can’t let it break you. Work, just work.”

Never underestimate the power of community.

In 2022, Travis was transferred into Los Angeles’ Male Community Reentry Program (MCRP), a reentry multi-tenant apartment complex that provides programs and tools necessary to transition from custody to community. Monitored with an ankle bracelet, Travis discovered Five Keys and its innovative transitional employment program.

His break was being hired by Five Keys on the Cal Crew. Through the Five Keys Transitional Employment and Reentry programs, people like Travis receive robust support to help them find permanent employment, progress along educational pathways, or enroll in progressive job training. Job readiness workshops, reentry support, access to high school completion, and hosted resource groups are provided.

“Travis is an extraordinary leader in that he takes the initiative to do things he sees need to be done instead of waiting for someone to suggest it,” said Dave Bates, VP of Transitional Employment & Reentry. “Travis forecasts what needs to be done and he gets it done. That is what you want in a leader.”

These days Travis is also passionate about giving back, reaching out to help others “get the second chance I did.”

There is a sorrow that continues to burrow in his heart. His best buddy in prison, a forty-something guy named Christophe, is sentenced to life without parole. “We were in solitary together and could only talk between the walls,” says Travis. “These days I can call and write him, but it’s hard because I am out and there is a guilt there and sadness. He got me through so much and is my best friend. Isn’t it weird, I have a best friend I never got to even shake hands with and probably never will. It’s rough. I feel very remorseful.”

Dignity Village Groundbreaking Ceremony

Maurice Ramirez, Alamedapost.com
Posted Nov 7, 2022, at 7:50 am PT

On October 25, 2022, the City of Alameda held a ceremony to celebrate breaking ground for construction of Dignity Village on Fifth Street. City Council authorized the project in a 4-1 vote on April 5, with Councilmember Trish Herrera Spencer voting against. The City of Alameda is sponsoring the project. $2,555,844 in operational funding and $9,225,536 for the development of the project is coming from the State of California (State) through the Housing and Community Development Department (HCD), and another $2,654,622 in capitalized operational reserves sourced from the Alameda County Housing and Community Development Department. The City is also contributing $10,855,995 towards the development and operations of this project.

Dignity Village will be administered by two organizations. DignityMoves, is serving as the project development manager. Five Keys Schools and Programs will serve as the onsite social service provider and property manager. The complex consists of a two-story shelter, a three-story shelter, an administration building, a community building, community gardens, a pet area, and 27 parking spaces. When it is completed, the center will house up to 61 individuals and couples in 47 units. Dignity Village will serve the homeless, chronically homeless, and homeless youth.

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Construction Of Dignity Village To Kick-Off In Alameda

Dignity Village, an Interim Supportive Housing project in Alameda, will serve the homeless, chronically homeless, and homeless youth.

Kim Harris, Patch Staff, Patch.com
Posted Mon, Oct 24, 2022 at 2:38 pm PT|

ALAMEDA, CA — Construction on Dignity Village, a two story, 47 room Interim Supportive Housing project located at 2350 Fifth Street, will begin Tuesday, Oct. 25 at 10 a.m. with a kick-off celebration, the city of Alameda announced in a news release.

When completed, Dignity Village will serve the homeless, chronically homeless and homeless youth, the city said.

Pictured (left to right): Assemblymember Mia Bonta, Mayor Marilyn Ezzy Ashcroft, Senator Nancy Skinner, City Staffmember Lisa Maxwell, Elizabeth Funk, CEO DignityMoves, and Steve Good, CEO Five Keys

Each of Dignity Village's 168 square foot rooms will include a private bathroom. The project also boasts community programming spaces, including a dining space, community garden and courtyard, as well as meeting rooms, private offices for support services staff, and storage, the city said.

Speakers at the kick-off celebration include Alameda Mayor Marilyn Ezzy Ashcraft, Alameda Community Development Director Lisa Maxwell, Assemblymember Mia Bonta, Senator Nancy Skinner, Elizabeth Funk of DignityMoves and Steve Good, President and CEO of Five Keys Schools and Programs.

According to the news release, Dignity Village has received $2,555,844 in operational funding and $9,225,536 for the development of the project from the State of California through the Housing and Community Development Department, and $2,654,622 in capitalized operational reserves from Alameda County Housing and Community Development Department with the support of Alameda County Supervisor Dave Brown. The city of Alameda is also contributing $10,855,995 towards the development and operations of the project.

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Pardon Us: Meet the Women Behind Home Free Here, they open up about life after prison

On Never Losing Hope

Meet Nilda Sarayda Palacios, 39

Today: Health worker, the San Francisco Department of Public Health

Life behind bars: Nilda was 17 when she was convicted and sentenced. For 17 years, Nilda served time behind bars, ending up in prison and sentenced to 27-years-to-life for killing a man who was abusing her physically and very cruelly and emotionally during the time she was homeless. She wasn’t allowed to bring into court evidence of abuse.

Beginning again:  Nilda was released in 2017 from the California Institution for Women in Chino, CA. Her sentence was reduced to involuntary manslaughter, and she was given credit for time served. For 16 years prior to that, she spent 16 years in Central California’s Women’s Facility in Chowchilla, the largest women’s prison in the state. 

First thing she did when she was released:  “I went to the beach and wrote ‘freedom’ in the sand.”

In a name: Nilda’s name comes  from the Greek word that stands for “Warrior

Woman.” It’s a name her Guatemalan mother picked for her after a niece who died early, and her mother says, is meant to conjure up the image of a woman always having to face challenges all on her own.  As she grew older, Nilda changed her name for a while to “Emily,” her brother’s middle name. In prison she had to abandon both names and was referred to as an identification number.

Moving on: Life after being behind bars: “I do self-nurturing and self-care by focusing my energy and time on things that are interesting to me. I’m also mindful of my five year parole plan and not allowing myself to be deterred from completing the plan objectives.”

Mantra and mission:  “Do not lose hope, engage in persistent prayer, and rely on your unwavering faith. My overall message is to be kind to others as you may never know when you’re entertaining angels, remain consistent in reaching for your dreams and don’t give up no matter how difficult things may seem.”

How she’s redefining herself: “I’m reconnecting with the community, working

on being more spiritually grounded and more open to learning things I didn’t know about myself.

Favorite book: The Notebook, by Nicholas Sparks an intensely romantic book—a novel about the everlasting power of “true love.”

Her Good News: In the five years Nilda has been working tirelessly to have her dream come true — to own her own home. She set a goal and worked every day toward it. In August, she purchased a three-bed, three-bath home in Pittsburgh, CA, where she lives with her new partner, and dog, Milo. Over the Labor Day weekend, she hosted a weekend-long celebration inviting her whole family over.

Five Keys staff donate backpacks, school supplies to LA-area students

Five Keys Celebrates “Happy Back to School!” for Students in Huntington Park, CA

Five Keys staff gathered more than 3,000 backpacks and school supplies for students of all ages heading back to school in Huntington Park, CA, a mostly Hispanic, working-class community in the inner Southeastern Los Angeles area.

On August 13, members of Five Keys’ ELO and Student Services teams joined the “Happy Back to School” event, which drew more than 5,000 people, and sponsored by Be Social Productions, according to Carol Guillen, Learning Recovery Manager.

“Our goal was to engage with the community and give back,” says Guillen. “One of the Five Keys stands for ‘Community’ and this event gave us the opportunity to immerse with one of the communities we service. We were able to give back to school age students and share the great services Five Keys provides with those interested in enrolling.”

The event, held at Salt Lake Park in Huntington Park included surprise guest, J.R. Villanueva, from the Disney Channel series Ultra Violet & Black Scorpion and included free backpacks, school supplies,  COVID-19 vaccines, health screenings, free kids’ haircuts, arts and crafts, raffles and much more.

A shoutout goes to Baby2Baby, a nonprofit which provides diapers, formula and the basic needs for children living in poverty, and Big Sunday, an LA-area organization which organizes more than 2,000 ways for volunteers to help the community each year.

Big Sunday donated 175 pre-filled back packs and Baby2Baby donated over 6,000 writing utensils (pens/pencils/markers/color pencils) along with some binders. Five Keys provided "swag" items such as pencil pouches, hand sanitizers, portable chargers, lip balms, coasters, notebooks, and pens with the Five Keys logo. The Five Keys booth drew much attention to Five Keys’ ESL classes, adds Guillen.

Five Keys staff who helped organize the event included: Carol Guillen, Andrea Casillas, Learning Recovery Paraprofessional, Claudia Tinajero, Administrative Assistant, Karla Muñoz, Administrative Assistant, Dorothy Velasco, Assistant Director of Operations and Vanessa Martinez, Regional Administrative Manager.

Planting Seeds for Success: Five Keys Community Farming Initiative Gets Green Thumbs Up with $300,000 USDA Urban Agriculture Innovation Grant

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, August 16, 2022 – Five Keys Schools & Programs’ Ecological Agriculture Training/NORCO (EAT!) program received a $300,000 innovation grant from The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to fund its innovative urban agriculture program in Southern California.

“This grant will help local farmers through our EAT program create new, more affordable, and better local market options and help our urban community produce fresh and healthy food locally and reduce food waste,” said Steve Good, President & CEO Five Keys. “Supporting agriculture in our urban communities helps grow our economy and provides food to people, while creating a new generation of farmers.”  

Through its Urban Agriculture and Innovative Practices (UAIP) Grant program and cooperative services agreements, the USDA is investing $43.1 million in urban agriculture programs across the country to help deliver key USDA programs to urban producers. These actions support USDA’s efforts to strengthen the food supply chain and transform the food system to be fairer, more competitive, and more resilient.

Five Key’s EAT Center is a community-based program, partnered with the city of Norco, CA that is part of a growing trend of community farms that are cropping up across the country. EAT stands for Ecological Agriculture Training. Its mission is three-fold: to build community, empower small businesses and strengthen the City of Norco and Riverside County’s rural economy. One of the goals is creating a new generation of farmers while reducing food insecurity and inspiring hands-on farming among community members in Norco, and inspiring other towns to do the same. 

Five Keys farming programs originally were founded to serve in-custody (county jail) populations, through its correctional education programs. When the funding ended for these programs, Five Keys pivoted to community-based farming and found a willing partner in the City of Norco.

“We’re building a community that aims to educate, inspire, advocate, and create change,” says Chris Faucher, Assistant Director of Career Technical Education. Patrick Mitchell, EAT! Program Instructor and Mentor, added: “Food is the great connector. It is something that is embraced by the community and gives people a chance to support each other and be involved in a life-giving project together.”

During the first few months of the pandemic, the Five Keys EAT! Center pivoted to create social distancing safety protocols and launched the Small Farm Apprenticeship Program to train new farmers in regenerative and sustainable practices. In 2021 Five Keys and the EAT! Center launched the Norco Rural Farmers and Artisans Market. This weekly event is designed to support local farmers and small businesses. It features more than 20 arts and craft vendors, eight farms, three community organizations and seven cottage food businesses. Recently the EAT! Cultural Center launched the Family Agriculture Revival Movement. The FARM! Program is designed to engage farm families in the culture and community of farming. The program offers seminars and workshops that are open to everyone from the community. Many of our workshops will focus on topics ranging from canning, financial literacy, entrepreneurship, branding and more. Seasonal events and celebrations also are planned to support the local small farm effort.

Long-term plans for EAT! include community education programs and special events. In the short term, Five Keys is building the Ecological Agriculture Training Farm on land bordering the Cultural Center in Norco, CA. The training farm will provide hands on experience in various small scale, intensive agricultural practices. This USDA funding will support all of these programs, though it only covers approximately half the total required budget.

About Five Keys Schools & Programs

Five Keys was founded in 2003 by the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department as the first accredited charter high school in the nation to provide diploma programs for adults in county jails. Today Five Keys is a social justice non-profit agency that has expanded its schools into 9 counties, in 24 jail locations and over 80 community learning centers. In addition to schools, Five Keys operates multiple homeless shelters, permanent supportive housing programs, transitional employment programs, reentry programs and housing for women suffering from immense injustice. Five Keys is a second chance employer. Our goal is to restore communities through education and other programs that respond to the students’ and community needs — which in turn creates safer communities.  Visit: www.fivekeys.org.

 

About the Urban Agriculture and Innovation Production (UAIP) Grant. The UAIP competitive grants initiate or expand efforts of farmers, gardeners, citizens, government officials, schools, and other stakeholders in urban areas and suburbs. Projects may target areas of food access; education; business and start-up costs for new farmers; and development of policies related to zoning and other needs of urban production. To learn more visit: usda.gov.

Up from the Ashes: After devastating Woolsey Fire, Five Keys Crew is bringing Malibu’s beaches and national parklands back to life

In an effort that should inspire anyone seeking a second chance to turn his or her life around, 39-year-old Oscar Abrons III spends his days leading a crew of men who are rebuilding the breathtaking canyon trails and prized beaches of Malibu following the largest wildfire in Malibu’s history, which consumed nearly 97,000 acres in both Los Angeles and Ventura counties.

As manager of the Woolsey Park Project for Five Keys Schools and Programs, Abrons leads two crews who have been working almost daily to restore the hiking trails, access roads and campsites that were ravaged during the 2018 Woolsey Fire, leaving the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, the largest urban park in the country, looking like a war zone.

During these uncertain times, his hard work and that of his team are a reason for hope, an inspiration that communities can band together to pull themselves and each other out of despair and build
new life.

FiveKeysOscar1.jpg

For Abrons, who grew up about an hour away from the hills of Malibu in San Pedro, CA, laboring with his crew to transform the devastation into new life speaks volumes about his own and the community of support and second chances he found at Five Keys, following his own journey in and out of jail from ages 23 to 34.

“We have a great sense of pride knowing that we’ve faced some bad times in our lives, but that we can work hard together to create a better way,” says Abrons about the eight men he works with on the two crews he oversees, all of whom at one point in their lives have been incarcerated. “Five Keys changed my life dramatically with all the support they gave me.”

It was about five years ago when Abrons said he was taking a painting class behind bars and met Dave Bates, director of transitional employment and re-entry for Five Keys. 

“Coming out of jail and prison, I must have gone on 10 to 15 job interviews that were going nowhere,” says Abrons. “No one wanted someone who has been in jail and prison. But the support I found through Dave and everyone at Five Keys, it turned me around and showed me I can do something positive with my life.”

His first job: A crew member for Five Key’s Cal Fire Crew. Recently, he was promoted as manager of the crews. Prior to COVID-19, he oversaw two crews of eight members each. They were cut in half during the pandemic.

“Oscar aka (OB) , has been a tremendous addition to our Transitional re-entry team,” says Bates.  “His attention to detail, punctuality and people skills has elevated him above the rest of his crew.  I am confident knowing that when a task is given to him or research that is required, I can rest assured that it will be handled.  I have had the pleasure to watch OB grow from unemployment to a line staff and into a leadership role. “

FiveKeysFireCrew3.jpg

Now Abrons says his favorite part of the work is mentoring other crew members.

“All of us have been in transition from incarceration, some of the crew are ex-lifers,” says Abrons. “I like to help them know that they are not alone. Help is out there. None of us can do it alone. Everybody needs help and that is what our work together is. I tell them I want to see all of them succeed. I want to see all of them shine.”

In the meantime, when there are now red flag warnings of other fires in the Los Angeles area, Abrons and his crew head to the trails, beaches and dunes to clear the ashes and prove that everyone can recover, no matter what fires have ravaged their lives and tried to blacken and destroy the beauty. For Abrons and his crew, that means returning to the charred hiss, removing the debris, and planting the seeds of new life.

Getting Back on Course: “It’s about time” friends and family cheered during drive by high school graduation

During the time she was in and out of Santa Rita Jail in Dublin, CA for stolen property and drugs, Roshanda “Shanda” Howard would reflect on her teenage years in which she dropped out of high school in the 11th grade and fled her family to head for Michigan.

“I always wanted to make something out of my life, but some stupid decisions I made would always stop me,” says the Oakland, CA resident.

RoshandaSept2020.jpg

Fast-forward to this August, when Howard, 42, decked out in a cap and gown holding a bouquet of balloons, stood on her driveway with her four kids and her mother at her side, as a parade of teachers from Five Keys Schools and Programs drove cheering, honking their horns and playing the Pomp and Circumstance graduation walking march, to celebrate her major milestone: graduating from high school.

View Drive-By Graduation

“I had my mindset on this, this time,” says Howard, who just a week after her graduation was hired by a San Francisco private security firm to patrol building sites on the overnight shift. “It feels so good to finally finish. It’s been a long journey and I wanted to quit many times.”

Howard says she was especially motivated in 2018 when her daughter, Armani Nicole, now 20, graduated from high school. At the same time, one of her friends graduated from the Five Keys program. “What other motivation did I need,” she says.

“I’m so grateful to my teacher, Miss Michelle, because so many times I wanted to quit,” says Howard. “But she would call and say, ‘Are you coming in today?’ She always just kept telling me she knew I could do it.”

A single mom, recently out of jail and struggling to make a living, Howard says there were many times “I just thought, I can’t do this.”

Following her jail time, Howard regained custody of her four children through the Maximizing Opportunities for Mothers to Succeed (M.O.M.S.) program at the Santa Rita jail, whose mission is to promote family reunification and the healthy development of children by increasing the capacity of their mothers for self-sufficiency and parent-child bonding. After enrolling in Five Keys in 2018, she persevered through distance learning, taking rigorous courses including Algebra I.

For Howard and others who were formerly incarcerated, the Five Keys program cuts the recidivism rate by 30 percent, compared to statewide averages of 65 percent. Unfortunately, without programs like Five Keys, many people in jails rarely get the chance to make up for the educational opportunities from which they have been excluded — opportunities that impact their chances of reentry success.

Today, Howard proudly displays her diploma next to her daughters on a table in their front living room. She feels it sends a strong signal to her other three children, Desjon, 23, Ojeda, 16, and Kendall Reye, 5, to get their high school degree. In addition to the drive by graduation her family has thrown her two parties to celebrate this summer. And, especially meaningful to her was a phone call from her sister with whom she has been estranged from for a long time. “My sister called to say, ‘it’s about time.’ That meant a lot to me.” 

Now employed, Howard has her eye on continuing her education and becoming a probation officer for young people.

“Every time I walk in my living room and see my diploma, I look at it and ask myself what’s next,” she says. “But now I know I can accomplish what that will be. I have learned to stay calm and work hard and that I can succeed.”