Sunrise stories & News
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Press Release: Texas Attorney General
Austin, TX - On Tuesday, November 26, 2024, Sunrise Homeless Navigation Center was notified via the press that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit to stop Sunrise from providing humanitarian services to people experiencing homelessness at its South Austin location.
“It is regrettable that the Attorney General Paxton took this route, especially during the week of Thanksgiving, but Sunrise intends to keep offering services to people in our community who need them,” said Mark Hilbelink, Executive Director of Sunrise Homeless Navigation Center. “We are committed to being a good neighbor. We will continue to work, every day, to support Joslin Elementary School, our neighborhood, and our entire community.”
Press Release: Sunrise Hotline Expands
Austin, Texas – Sunrise Homeless Navigation Center, the highest-volume provider of homeless services in Travis County, is expanding Austin’s first dedicated homelessness hotline call center, thanks to funding from the City of Austin. The expansion, which increases availability from 4 hours a day to 12 hours a day, will provide even greater access to critical services and coordinated housing assessments for people experiencing or at risk of homelessness.
Statesman: Respite from the heat
Volunteers at Sunrise Homeless Navigation Center gave bandanas soaked in ice cold water to people experiencing homelessness during the summer heat.
Texas Tribune: Austin Winter Storm Shelters
Last week’s freeze was the first major test of the changes Austin has made to its cold weather and emergency shelter precautions since the winter storm in February 2021, and it showed that despite improvements in the city’s coordination and planning, weaknesses persist.
City of Austin: Partners Shelter Hundreds During Winter Weather
Dozens of staff from the City of Austin and partner agencies helped shelter hundreds of vulnerable people from the cold weather at up to five overnight Cold Weather Shelters between Thursday evening and Tuesday morning.
Statesman: Winter Storm Hits Austin
John Marcus Gordy, who has been homeless since he was evicted in July, warms up by a fire at the Sunrise Homeless Navigation Center on Friday December 23, 2022.
Statesman: Austins Opioid Overdose Problem
Standing in a gravel lot, with the sun pinned high in the October sky, Steve sees his former self as he makes his daily rounds through a homeless encampment filled with people grappling with substance use disorder. When he is approached by a man in the camp who admits his recent struggles with substances, Steve offers advice in the form of an analogy.
Fox 7 News: Gathering Donations to Help the Homeless
AUSTIN, Texas - With temperatures quickly dropping Thursday, community members have been doing what they can to help out the homeless community to stay warm.
Statesman: Austin to open cold weather shelters
The city of Austin announced Wednesday it was opening up to three cold weather shelters Thursday for anyone needing a warm place to sleep as an Arctic cold front makes its way south to Central Texas, plunging overnight temperatures into the teens and creating dangerous outdoor conditions for people experiencing homelessness.
KXAN: Christmas party for the homeless
Like any good Christmas party, Sunrise Homeless Prevention Center’s celebration had holiday music, food, and Santa himself present. The cold though would soon be an unwanted guest once the sun went down and the unhoused in attendance would search for somewhere to get out of the cold.
Austin Chronicle: Fentanyl ODs Spur Health Crisis
Earlier in the year, the Travis County Medical Examiner's Office reported that fentanyl-related overdoses had increased by 237% since 2020, making overdose the leading cause of accidental death in the county. In May, the Texas Harm Reduction Alliance organized a rousing town hall that brought first responders, drug users, homeless outreach organizations, and public officials together and highlighted the urgency of expanding the city's and county's response to the opioid crisis. The declaration of a public health emergency unlocked $350,000 in new funding and staffing for local harm reduction organizations and the county, and a plan to increase availability of methadone treatment for opioid addiction through Integral Care.
Community Impact: 7,000 free 31-day bus passes
On Nov. 16, members from several community groups fighting homelessness stood outside the Texas Harm Reduction Alliance center to celebrate securing nearly 7,000 free 31-day bus passes for unhoused Austinites.
Spectrum: Hotline devoted to Austin's homeless
Hotline devoted to Austin's homeless population.