Amidst staggering vaccination, peer educators are informing people experiencing homelessness about COVID-19 and encouraging vaccinations in their communities.
Content categorized as Jobs

City program employs homeless people to help promote vaccinations in shelters and on the streets
Look at This a Street Sense Media Podcast: Episode Five
Saul Aroha Nui Tea, who goes by “Salty,” has chosen to walk a different path than many of the other vendors of the Street Sense… Read more »
Look at This a Street Sense Media Podcast: Episode Two
Sheila White has been able to turn her life around thanks to the classes and connections she found working as a Street Sense vendor in… Read more »
Look at This a Street Sense Media Podcast: Episode One
In the premiere episode of “Look at This,” vendors Marcellus Phillips (who is featured in this week’s logo) and Chon Gotti share stories on how… Read more »

Until we pay the working poor a living wage, they will still need government aid
Artist/Vendor Wendall Williams provides his thoughts on why the government should consider a living wage based on lessons learned from COVID relief.

DC Inspector General will audit Department of Employment Services over late and missing unemployment payments
The D.C. Office of the Inspector General announced it will review the District’s Department of Employment Services following months of delayed payments and technical glitches that have left many unemployed workers without income.

My Biggest Challenge
Jeffrey Carter writes about the biggest challenge facing him today: homelessness. Carter is hopeful for the future.

Overloaded with landlords and real-estate developers, Bowser’s “Saving DC’s Rental Housing Market Strike Force” leaves out marginalized tenant voices
Tenant voices were conspicuously absent from the deliberation on recommendations that will affect the District’s most vulnerable renters’ ability to remain housed through the end of the pandemic and long after.

Spring and cold snaps
Jones shares his desire for better circumstances this Spring.

Career counseling and after school programs: What’s the connection?
Fletcher opines a piece on the effects COVID-19 has on at-risk students entering the job force, and the importance of career counselors in their trajectory.

Protesters call for Biden’s domestic policy chief to cancel rent
Tenants from D.C., Maryland, and Virginia marched to the home of White House domestic policy chief Susan Rice on Jan. 23 and called on the Biden administration to include rent cancelation in the latest COVID-19 relief package proposal

December relief bill keeps DC afloat, but the District and its workers look towards a Biden stimulus package
Jobless D.C. residents can look to extended federal unemployment programs even as problems plague local benefits and Biden’s plan stalls in Congress.

Workers report new problems claiming unemployment in the District
D.C. workers on pandemic-related unemployment programs are struggling to get approved for benefits and back-pay.

Advocates say new “Bridge Fund” shows DC can find money for businesses but not for poor people
After Mayor Muriel Bowser announced a $100 million grant fund for businesses struggling due to COVID-19, community organizations asked for the funding to be used to encourage those businesses to help their community.

Eviction moratorium to extend as COVID-19 and unemployment worsens homelessness
D.C. Council gives the Mayor authority to extend the state of emergency, thus extend the eviction moratorium. But COVID-19 and unemployment remain issues.

DC to provide one-time check to residents on COVID-19 unemployment programs
DC will provide a one-time payment of $1,200 to nearly 20,000 residents whose unemployment benefits are set to expire after Christmas.

Here’s how to claim unemployment in the District
Street Sense explains the unemployment benefits available, and how to claim them.

DC Central Kitchen to run new cafe in MLK Library
The nonprofit has trained people with high barriers to employment for the past 30 years and will now expand to run a new cafe in the renovated Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library in downtown D.C.

DOES faces criticism by workers and councilmembers over long wait times and late pay
In the second Council hearing on unemployment benefits this fall, workers and Councilmember SIlverman continued to raise concerns about DOES’s system for unemployment benefits.

Solar Works DC program creates jobs and can reduce expenses for low-income households
Solar Works D.C., through the DDOE, employs low-income residents in a solar installation and job training program. Panels are installed across the District, and low-income residents can request installations for free.