16-Year-Old's 'Wheels For Change' Program Is Helping San Diego's Homeless Get Jobs

in news •  7 years ago 

the homeless in San Diego have become jobs, way to a sixteen-yr-old boy.

kevin barber is supporting the homeless get paid with "wheels for change", a program that pays the homeless to easy up the town.

barber says he was given the concept from a ted communicate video showcasing a comparable software in Albuquerque that invited the city's homeless to easy local streets in alternate for wages and get right of entry to metropolis services.

towns across the country had been imposing comparable programs, so barber thought he should begin one in San Diego.

barber and his mother Carolyn, who funded the mission for her son, reached out to the town government to start a trial run of the program.

"this system is simple. numerous days every week a van will select up homeless people who specific a hobby in operating. the van will take them to paintings picking up trash, pulling weeds, clearing brush, etc. at the give up of the day, people could be pushed lower back to the alpha mission, or to the city's new tent structures for the homeless, and can be compensated for his or her paintings. right here they may additionally in all likelihood get safe haven organized. the goal is to get the homeless connected with social offerings they want, into housing, and provide them the glory of operating. it empowers human beings and offers them paintings. we trust that is a win-win for the metropolis, the homeless, and our community," Barber wrote on gofundme

contributors in wheels for alternate are paid $11.50 an hour.

the metropolis is considering financing this system shifting ahead, CNN reviews.

"it's a win-win for everybody," said metropolis councilman Scott Sherman.

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