Homeless Organizing for Power and Equality (H.O.P.E.) is the name of a Mid-South Peace and Justice Center sponsored organization who’s members are exclusively people who are currently or have formerly experienced homelessness. Fresh off the heels of victory in our ROAD HOME campaign, where H.O.P.E. won more than $500,000 of County funding for homeless and veterans issues this organization is eager to continue the fight for our people.
PLAY TO STAY CAMPAIGN
On Thursday, July 19th at the Peer Center at 669 Madison Ave members of “H.O.P.E.” held a protest against numerous complaints of sexual harassment against clients and female members of staff by a Peer Center employee.
Over the past two months H.O.P.E. has received numerous complaints from it’s members about instances of lewd and homophobic language and repeated unwanted sexual propositions and the group is taking this very seriously.
As I heard our members share their experiences, we were stunned. This situation with this staff person is out of control including offering one of our members $20 to show him her breasts and telling her and others about the size of his penis, and asking a woman, “if she wanted to be in a “three way” with him and his girlfriend.“
Members of the group say that this is not the only allegation of sexual harassment that they have received from clients and past staff and rises concerns over staff of oversight within the local organization. H.O.P.E.’s members, some of which reside at the Peer Center and others filed a formal grievance with the Tennessee Mental Health Consumers’ Association,(T.M.H.C.A.) The parent company of the local Peer Center. The employee in question was suspended and later returned to his duties with a mere stipulation that he receive sensitivity training and is under orders not to speak to the victim accept in cases of emergency.
While we deeply respect the advocacy work of the (T.M.H.C.A.) this is simply unacceptable, especially when you consider that 92% of women who have experienced homelessness have suffered severe physical and or sexual assault in their lifetimes. How can you have a person who is supposed to be counseling these women behaving this way. It not only is unacceptable, but is a direct threat to the healing process.
UPDATE– The Tennessee Dept of Mental Health has launched an official investigation and legal counsel for H.O.P.E. is currently in communications with T.M.H.C.A. legal counsel. We also have learned that a new staff person has been hired at the Peer Center, so that those who do not wish to have peer counseling sessions with the alleged predator will have an alternative. H.O.P.E. will work comprehensively to ensure that all people who are experiencing homelessness are treated with respect, and that our shelters are places of safety and healing.
H.O.P.E is continuing to investigate allegations of criminal wrong doing at two other local homeless service providers at the request of our members.