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People in crisis who need a place to stay all day in night in Collin County often have nowhere to go. The county does have some options available. The Salvation Army of Plano opens its doors as a warming center for the homeless when temperatures hit 36 degrees Fahrenheit or below.
Sylvia Foster was up past 10 p. She was eating packets of mustard and drinking bottled water to soothe her throat. It was sore from a cold. Foster has stayed at the warming center before. She said the hours are limited. People who stay overnight are back on the streets by 6 a. They have breakfast, and you have to get out. So where do people go? Jimmy Coleman said he goes to Haggard Park in downtown Plano. Eaden got that information from the point-in-time count.
But school districts often do find them. The program aims to remove barriers to education for students experiencing homelessness. He said the district already has counted about McKinney Vento students as of January and expects to find more. The district used to have about four or five hundred McKinney Vento students a year in the past. Courtney Grober is the assistant superintendent for student, family and community services for Plano ISD. Plano does have a rapid rehousing program to move people off the streets.
Eaden said the city connects the person in need of housing with a case manager and pays rent and utilities for up to a year. The case manager helps with life skills and job searching. So where are you staying? Some people stay in a hotel or motel β Grober said Plano ISD even sends a school bus to pick up students at a few hotels in the district.
Coleman said he lived in a motel off of U. Highway 75 with his brother before he ended up on the streets. Foster also lived in a hotel. She said having to pay for a temporary place to stay like a hotel makes it harder for people to transition out of homelessness.