Quita Curtis could tell the man lying on a blanket behind a van showing lots of wear and tear needed help.
She spotted the man on one of the hottest afternoons of the year camping out in Columbia Heights’ Huset Park, handed him a sandwich and bottle of cold water, and struck up a conversation.
“I call it triage,” said Curtis, a caseworker with the Salvation Army North, who spends two days a week in the first-ring suburb as part of the nonprofit’s new Street Outreach program. “I find out why they are on the street. I validate their feelings and let them know they are not alone.”
Launched just over a month ago, the outreach is a proactive effort to find those experiencing homelessness and get them shelter and provide basic needs such as food, clothing, access to a hot shower or even a gas card.
“It’s the first time going to the street rather than waiting for them to come to us,” said Dan Furry, a spokesman for Salvation Army North.
The outreach is bankrolled with a $564,000 Family Homeless Prevention and Assistance Program grant from Minnesota Housing and administered by Anoka County. The county has also kicked in money from the Local Homeless Prevention Fund, said Aimee Barbeau, an assistant director in the County’s Social Service Department.
“It’s meeting an unmet need,” she said.
Curtis works in tandem with the Columbia Heights Police Department to identify locations where homeless people can be found. Sometimes with an officer at her side and other times flying solo, Curtis scouts out parks, libraries, laundromats, civic events and other places people who are homeless hang out.