Program areas at CEO
Housing and emergency services: offers housing stability services to low income families with children, veterans, and vulnerable senior citizens and disabled with fixed incomes. Provides resolutions to short term, emergency housing needs to prevent homelessness. Provides guidance and assistance for other short term financial emergencies that allow families with children, senior citizens, the disabled, and veterans. Program funding includes federal, state and local sources. Housing supports including rental and relocation assistance, emergency shelter, foreclosure prevention was provided to 5,639 families with children, senior citizens, disabled and veterans. Services enable families to attain or maintain their stable housing.
Food bank/nutrition services: distributes donated and purchased food product to a network of 356 food distribution partners. Promotes healthy nutrition among low income and vulnerable populations in our 4 County regions, especially children and senior citizens. Program funding includes federal, state and private donors; including food companies, businesses, foundations, and individuals. The food bank received 7,324,017 lbs. of donated food product valued at $11,205,746; supplemental food boxes provided to approx. 2,310 seniors monthly; agency food pantries provided 5,586 units of service to 1,983 unique families; thanksgiving distribution provided to 6,889 families; nutrition education sessions reached 8,629 school-aged children, 4,471 adults and 800 elderly and 29,917 printed recipes and nutrition information was shared at food pantries throughout the community.
Weatherization and energy assistance: promotes residential energy conservation and health and safety; addresses short-term energy crises for low-income families, senior citizens, those with disabilities, and veterans faced with broken heating equipment, lack of fuel, or utility service termination. Program funding sources include federal, state, as well as various utility companies and private donors. 10,929 households qualified for emergency heating assistance though the liheap crisis program; 13,025 low income families with children, senior citizens, the disabled and veterans enrolled in utility customer assistance programs; 1,207 families received weatherization services.
Donations and grants and housing