Lotus House https://lotushouse.org/ Where Hope Blossoms Wed, 14 May 2025 14:14:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://lotushouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Screenshot-2023-04-10-at-11.23.32-AM.png Lotus House https://lotushouse.org/ 32 32 ‘CAN HAPPEN TO ANYONE’: A look into the work of the largest women’s homeless shelter in the country https://lotushouse.org/can-happen-to-anyone-a-look-into-the-work-of-the-largest-womens-homeless-shelter-in-the-country/ Wed, 14 May 2025 13:52:06 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=4309 ‘CAN HAPPEN TO ANYONE’: A look into the work of the largest women’s homeless shelter in the country Overtown, a neighborhood near downtown Miami, stands the largest homeless shelter for women and children in the country. By: Brooke Chau May 12, 2025 OVERTOWN, Fla. — Over 1 million women and 2.5 million children experience homelessness every […]

The post ‘CAN HAPPEN TO ANYONE’: A look into the work of the largest women’s homeless shelter in the country appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

'CAN HAPPEN TO ANYONE': A look into the work of the largest women's homeless shelter in the country

Overtown, a neighborhood near downtown Miami, stands the largest homeless shelter for women and children in the country.

By: Brooke Chau

May 12, 2025

OVERTOWN, Fla. — Over 1 million women and 2.5 million children experience homelessness every year in the United States, according to the National Women’s Shelter Network.


“We need to understand that this can happen to anyone,” said Grettel Jiménez-Singer, Director for the National Women’s Shelter Network. “We are a network of over 400 shelters on a national level from all over the country.”


The National Women’s Shelter Network aims to break down homeless stereotypes while helping shelters across the United States with resources and tools to help women and children get off the streets for good.

“If a woman is experiencing homelessness, or families are experiencing homelessness, they easily find a shelter wherever they are,” Singer said.

In Overtown, a neighborhood near downtown Miami, stands the largest homeless shelter for women and children in the country, named the Lotus House.

“We want them to feel like they’re at home and not in an institution,” said Lotus House Executive Director Isabella Dell’Oca. “We want them to feel great about themselves before they start their healing process from within.”

Over 525 women and children sleep at the Lotus House each night with an average stay of up to six months. They assist over 1,550 women and children annually.

The Lotus House is filled with playrooms, salons, cooking classes, and the ability to heal while starting a new chapter full of educational and employment opportunities. 95% of the operations team at the Lotus House were once there seeking help and working to get back on their feet— a true example of the transformative work happening side their walls.

With over 40 homeless shelters for women and children in South Florida, four of them are in Palm Beach County: YWCA of PBCChange my CommunityThe Lord’s PlaceHannah’s Home of South Florida.

“We need to change the way we look at homelessness,” Singer said. “We need to understand that this is something that can happen to anyone.” For more information on the the National Women’s Shelter Network, click here.

https://www.wptv.com/news/inspiring-south-florida/can-happen-to-anyone-a-look-into-the-work-of-the-largest-womens-homeless-shelter-in-the-country

The post ‘CAN HAPPEN TO ANYONE’: A look into the work of the largest women’s homeless shelter in the country appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Miami’s non-profit women’s shelter Lotus House creates the Children’s Village as a resource for survivors of domestic violence https://lotushouse.org/miamis-non-profit-womens-shelter-lotus-house-creates-the-childrens-village-as-a-resource-for-survivors-of-domestic-violence/ Thu, 10 Apr 2025 19:53:12 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=3967 Miami’s non-profit women’s shelter Lotus House creates the Children’s Village as a resource for survivors of domestic violence Lotus House, a non-profit women’s shelter in Miami’s Overtown district that is also the nation’s largest, plans to create the Children’s Village featuring after-school care, tutoring, creative arts, computer learning and a large playground as well as […]

The post Miami’s non-profit women’s shelter Lotus House creates the Children’s Village as a resource for survivors of domestic violence appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Miami’s non-profit women’s shelter Lotus House creates the Children’s Village as a resource for survivors of domestic violence

Lotus House, a non-profit women’s shelter in Miami’s Overtown district that is also the nation’s largest, plans to create the Children’s Village featuring after-school care, tutoring, creative arts, computer learning and a large playground as well as therapeutic and social services. The Children’s Village will also serve as home to other community-based non-profits offering resources and programming to both sheltered and neighborhood children.

The $20-million, 75,000-sq.-ft. children’s center will be across the street from Lotus Village, the shelter that opened in 2017 with the mission of ending homelessness for women, many of them victims of domestic violence. More than 80% of Lotus Village’s clients exit the shelter programs with financial self-sufficiency. Services at the children’s center at Lotus Village will be aimed at preventing homelessness for children, says Constance Collins, founder and executive director of Lotus House.

https://www.floridatrend.com/article/34126/miamis-non-profit-womens-shelter-lotus-house-creates-the-childrens-village-as-a-resource-for-survivors-of-domestic-violence/

The post Miami’s non-profit women’s shelter Lotus House creates the Children’s Village as a resource for survivors of domestic violence appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Miami-Dade knows how to tackle homelessness and the success of Lotus Village is proof https://lotushouse.org/elementor-3950/ Tue, 12 Nov 2024 11:13:00 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=3950 Miami-Dade knows how to tackle homelessness and the success of Lotus Village is proof | Opinion Putting aside the homeless-tax controversy with Miami-Dade County and the Homeless Trust in the cities of Miami Beach, Surfside and Bal Harbour, one thing is extraordinarily clear from this past Saturday night: Our community does know how to reduce […]

The post Miami-Dade knows how to tackle homelessness and the success of Lotus Village is proof appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Miami-Dade knows how to tackle homelessness and the success of Lotus Village is proof | Opinion

Putting aside the homeless-tax controversy with Miami-Dade County and the Homeless Trust in the cities of Miami Beach, Surfside and Bal Harbour, one thing is extraordinarily clear from this past Saturday night: Our community does know how to reduce and prevent homelessness.

You may be thinking… what did she just say? But it’s true. The number of people sleeping at night on the street in Miami-Dade is about half of what it was at the turn of the century. And in that time, the county’s general population has grown almost 20%.

Two factors play a role: There are more shelters for the homeless population today than in 2000 and there is less rebound homelessness. That means, when people leave a shelter, they don’t end up back on the street — at least, that goes for women.

You can thank the people who created, live in, work at and volunteer time and money at Lotus House. And you can thank yourself every time you eat out. You probably don’t even think about how much good you are doing every time you order the extra guac or another round of drinks for the team. The 1% food and beverage tax that we pay in much of Miami-Dade helps Lotus House and about two dozen other facilities that shelter the homeless.

Last weekend, a few hundred of our community’s finest individuals gathered to mark the 20th anniversary of Lotus Village, which started as Lotus House in a renovated apartment building with the generosity of a handful of local donors and volunteers.

Lotus Village, in Miami’s Overtown neighborhood, is now a beautiful city block of a building and the largest and most successful women’s shelter in the United States. It has hallways of modern art, gardens, activities labs, quiet spaces and soothing gardens. There is a health clinic that serves the local community. The results are extraordinary: 85% of residents successfully exit Lotus Village to a stable environment, a rate that far exceeds other shelter programs across the country. And 40% of the staff were once guests themselves. The vibe inside is vibrant, energetic, warm, loving and almost a little magical.

Since the pandemic, Lotus House has been at its capacity of 530 residents every night (half are children, newborns to teenagers). None of this would be possible without founder Constance Collins, who has earned every honor possible for her work.

But part of her brilliance is the team she assembled, including elected officials like Miami-Dade Mayor Daniela Levine Cava and Commission Chairman Oliver Gilbert, celebrities like Gloria Estefan and Giselle Bundchen, and alumni staff, donors and volunteers who leave Lotus House feeling like the day is too short and they want to do more.

During the anniversary celebration, those gathered honored the legacies of the founding benefactors Martin Margulies, Julie Lotspeich, Dr. Kathryn Villano, John & Jo Sumberg (and the team at Bilzin Sumberg), Angela Whitman, Debi Weschler and the Braman Family Foundation, Anita Broad — wife of the late Morris Broad — and in memorium to Dr. Gordon Miller and John Lang Looby. They honored volunteers of the year, Men in Pink.

And they played a just-released PSA starring Gloria Estefan and Giselle Bundchen to promote the National Women’s Shelter Network (which Lotus Village brought into existence!) Estefan and Bundchen were both on stage at the event as we learned the magnitude of what the NWSN can and will accomplish for women and children across the country.

The children who entered the doors of Lotus House in the early days are now grown, headed to college, working. Some have children of their own. Saturday night was a celebration of their safety, their successes and the fruit of their potential that was nourished, nurtured, realized and is still unfolding. They are now part of the Village where we all live together.

Tiffany Zientz Heckler is a member of the Lotus House board of directors and is CFO of LSN Partners.

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op-ed/article295372284.html#storylink=cpy

The post Miami-Dade knows how to tackle homelessness and the success of Lotus Village is proof appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Creating a Healthy Environment in Lotus Village https://lotushouse.org/epi/ Tue, 26 Sep 2023 19:46:21 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=2825 Creating a Healthy Environment in Lotus Village The Sundari Foundation, dba Lotus House Women’s Shelter, strives to nourish and uplift women, youth, and children experiencing homelessness by providing healing sanctuary, support, education, tools, and resources that empower them to improve the quality of their lives on every level, achieve greater self-sufficiency, and build brighter futures. […]

The post Creating a Healthy Environment in Lotus Village appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Creating a Healthy Environment in Lotus Village

The Sundari Foundation, dba Lotus House Women’s Shelter, strives to nourish and uplift women, youth, and children experiencing homelessness by providing healing sanctuary, support, education, tools, and resources that empower them to improve the quality of their lives on every level, achieve greater self-sufficiency, and build brighter futures. Lotus House Women’s Shelter operates in Lotus Village, a state-of-the-art 100,000 SF facility in Miami, FL, which supports 520+ women, youth and children every night, making it the largest women’s shelter in the country.

Through the COVID-19 pandemic, the importance of creating a healthy environment in a large, congregate shelter setting was evident. With the goal of increasing environmental justice for those who are amongst the most vulnerable in our communities, Lotus House embarked on a demonstration and public education project related to the air transmission of COVID-19 and importance of indoor air quality with support from the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Individuals experiencing homelessness are disproportionately impacted by health issues, including respiratory and infectious disease and in terms of incidence, severity, emergency room (ER) attendance, hospitalization, deaths and COVID-19, making this project even more critical in a shelter setting. Many of the Lotus House guests originate from the Overtown area, where disparities in respiratory diseases are clear and 51.7% of children live below the poverty line. Through recent studies on the intersection between homelessness and environmental justice, it was concluded that homeless populations experience negative health outcomes associated with poor air quality and have up to 4x the rate of COVID-19 infection. Through increased understanding of respiratory illness and its prevention and treatment, as well as the direct benefit of residing in a facility that prioritizes indoor air quality (IAQ), the vulnerable women, youth and children who call Lotus House home have the opportunity to improve their individual health and advance the collective health of the community.

In addition to many improved operating procedures, the team advanced the air systems at Lotus Village to improve the IAQ and prevent the spread of infectious diseases within the facility. Every air handler system in the building was adapted to include an air purifying system that incorporates Ultraviolet (UV) light technology to kill viral, bacterial and fungal organisms with Sanuvox Technologies products. All air filters were upgraded to MERV-13 hospital grade filters. Additionally, mobile UV light towers are used regularly throughout the facility to disinfect surfaces in heavily occupied or exposed spaces. These combined strategies reduce the chance of infection to the 1400+ guests sheltered at Lotus Village annually.

Methods of education, prevention and involvement were incorporated to engage sheltered guests in the advancement of their community health. Bi-weekly notices to guests included information and education on COVID-19 prevention and treatment, including access to testing, vaccines and respiratory health care. All notices are distributed in English, Spanish and Haitian

Creole. Information on smoking, asthma, and other infectious vectors is provided, as well as children’s educational activities. COVID-19 testing and vaccination opportunities were made available to guests on site regularly, as well as off-site services arranged with support from the Health and Wellness Team. Through participation in the Lotus House Operations Internship Program, currently sheltered guests receive education on IAQ and hands-on training to implement environmental safety measures throughout Lotus Village.

Collectively, these efforts to improve IAQ and prevent the spread of respiratory illnesses, including COVID-19, decrease the likelihood of illness for high special needs women, youth and children experiencing homelessness in Miami-Dade County. Other congregate shelters can benefit from these research and demonstration efforts to increase environmental justice for vulnerable populations across the country.

Sources

Baggett, T. P. (2021, February 5). Covid-19 and homelessness: When crises intersect. The Lancet Public Health. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667 (21)00022-0/fulltext

Goodling, E. (2019, December 18). Intersecting hazards, intersectional identities: A baseline Critical Environmental Justice analysis of US homelessness. Sage Journals. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2514848619892433

Health Council of South Florida. (2023). Advanced search: Build a custom dashboard. Miami Matters: Measuring What Matters in Miami-Dade County. https://www.miamidadematters .org/?module=indicators&controller=index&action=indicatorsearch&doSe arch=1&showComparisons=1&l=10491

Rose, J. (2019, February 15). Unsheltered Homelessness in Urban Parks: Perspectives on Environment, Health, and Justice in Salt Lake City, Utah. Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. Publishers. https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/env.2018.0023

The post Creating a Healthy Environment in Lotus Village appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Homeless Shelter Therapy Sessions Benefit Mothers and Children https://lotushouse.org/homeless-shelter-therapy-sessions-benefit-mothers-and-children/ Thu, 11 May 2023 23:05:00 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=1752 Homeless Shelter Therapy Sessions Benefit Mothers and Children Short-term therapy sessions with parents and their children in homeless shelters could help improve parenting skills and reduce parental stress and children’s post-traumatic stress symptoms, according to a pilot study published by the American Psychological Association. Researchers from Florida International University partnered with Lotus House in Miami, […]

The post Homeless Shelter Therapy Sessions Benefit Mothers and Children appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Homeless Shelter Therapy Sessions Benefit Mothers and Children

Short-term therapy sessions with parents and their children in homeless shelters could help improve parenting skills and reduce parental stress and children’s post-traumatic stress symptoms, according to a pilot study published by the American Psychological Association.

Researchers from Florida International University partnered with Lotus House in Miami, one of the largest women’s homeless shelters in the U.S. The study included 144 families (mother and one child) with children from 18 months to 5 years of age. The research was published online in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology.

Shelter staff worked daily with the families to build trust with the mothers – many of whom weren’t seeking therapy – and 99% of them agreed to take part in the study, said lead researcher Paulo Graziano, PhD, a professor of psychology at Florida International University.

“We’re excited to find that evidence-based parenting interventions can be implemented within a shelter setting with wonderful benefits to the mothers and children,” he said. “I think more community-university partnerships are essential towards addressing the mental health needs of our most vulnerable families and children in a setting where they normally wouldn’t receive it.”

More than 2 million children in the U.S. experience homelessness every year, and homeless children face heightened challenges from poverty, traumatic experiences, mental illness and behavioral problems. Previous research has also found that homelessness is associated with increased parental frustration and negative parenting behaviors, including aggression. Those issues can be exacerbated by the parents’ chronic medical, mental health or substance use issues and their own histories of trauma.

Graziano and his team trained Lotus House staff to provide two types of evidence-based therapy to the mothers and their children in weekly sessions over three or four months. Half of the participants received Parent-Child Interaction Therapy while the other half received Child-Parent Psychotherapy.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy includes positive parenting techniques to reduce critical statements and negative interactions with children during observed play sessions. Child-Parent Psychotherapy uses play and language to help identify and address traumatic triggers, provide emotional support and offer assistance with daily living issues.

Mothers in both therapy groups reported reductions in their stress and their children’s post-traumatic stress symptoms. The mothers also made more positive statements during observed play sessions. Parent-Child Interaction Therapy also helped reduce children’s behavior problems so may be more effective in a shelter setting, the study noted.

With adequate training and supervision, homeless shelter staff may not need mental health degrees to provide effective therapy, Graziano said. His team and Lotus House are working on a larger randomized trial to see if the successes from this pilot study can be replicated at other homeless shelters. He also hopes that other researchers will conduct their own studies.

Constance Collins, president of the Sundari Foundation, which operates Lotus House, said the project has produced dramatic results.

“It was a game changer that transformed homelessness into a window of opportunity for our children,” she said. “We’re sharing our experiences with other homeless shelters across the country with hopes that critically needed therapy will become more available to homeless parents and their children.”

Article: “Early Intervention for Families Experiencing Homelessness: A Pilot Randomized Trial Comparing Two Parenting Programs,” Paulo Graziano, PhD, Jamie A. Spiegel, PhD, and Timothy Hayes, PhD, Florida International University; Emily Arcia, PhD, Emily Arcia Consulting Co.; and the Sundari Foundation-Lotus House. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, published online May 11, 2023.

See full article 

See research article 

The post Homeless Shelter Therapy Sessions Benefit Mothers and Children appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Gisele Bündchen Gives $1M to Youth Shelter: ‘Building a Solid Community for Children Is So Important’ https://lotushouse.org/gisele-bundchen-gives-1m-to-youth-shelter-building-a-solid-community-for-children-is-so-important/ Thu, 27 Apr 2023 13:24:06 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=1703 Gisele Bündchen Gives $1M to Youth Shelter: ‘Building a Solid Community for Children Is So Important’ https://people.com/style/gisele-bundchen-donates-million-dollars-childrens-shelter-miami/ The model’s generous donation will go directly toward a new playground and youth programming Gisele Bündchen is sharing her fortune with those in need. On Tuesday, Lotus House, the nation’s largest women’s shelter in Miami’s Overtown neighborhood, broke […]

The post Gisele Bündchen Gives $1M to Youth Shelter: ‘Building a Solid Community for Children Is So Important’ appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Gisele Bündchen Gives $1M to Youth Shelter: 'Building a Solid Community for Children Is So Important'

https://people.com/style/gisele-bundchen-donates-million-dollars-childrens-shelter-miami/

The model’s generous donation will go directly toward a new playground and youth programming

Gisele Bündchen is sharing her fortune with those in need.

On Tuesday, Lotus House, the nation’s largest women’s shelter in Miami’s Overtown neighborhood, broke ground on their new Children’s Village, a facility centered on the needs of the community’s youth.

At the event, it was also announced that the supermodel would donate $1 million to fund a new playground along with programming within the Children’s Village.

“Building a solid community for children is so important,” the supermodel shared in a press release announcing the new shelter and her donation, “especially for those who are vulnerable and in need.”

“Like everything in life, it takes a seed of an idea for something to grow, and I am honored to help Lotus House grow its impact with the creation of the Children’s Village,” she said.

Bündchen then spoke specifically about why building the playground means so much to her. “Funding the playground for the Children’s Village is important to me because the benefits of play include physical fitness, social interactions, cognitive development, self-confidence, and overall well-being. All these elements build a strong foundation for growth,” she said.

 

The Lotus House opened in 2006 and has helped more than 10,000 women, children and youth, according to the organization.

Five years ago, the organization opened its state-of-the-art Lotus Village, which successfully sets guests up for post-shelter life. In fact, more than 80 percent of the shelter’s guests successfully exit the shelter system following their time at Lotus Village.

Bündchen has been bringing positive vibes to all aspects of her life lately. She shared a candid video on Instagram last week, in which she could be seen smiling and riding a bicycle through a tropical setting to the tune of ADMT’s cover of TRINIX and Rushawn’s “Beautiful Day (Thank You for Sunshine).”

In the caption of her post, Bündchen wrote about life’s tribulations, saying, “We all have our fair shares of trials. Every laugh, every fall, every experience, the good and the bad, everything is here to teach us something and help us grow.”

“Nothing is permanent. So let’s enjoy the good moments and learn from the bad ones,” she continued. “Every day is a gift! ✨.”

Bündchen then repeated her caption in Portuguese.

The post Gisele Bündchen Gives $1M to Youth Shelter: ‘Building a Solid Community for Children Is So Important’ appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Bank of America honors groups as 2022 Neighborhood Builders https://lotushouse.org/bank-of-america-honors-groups-as-2022-neighborhood-builders/ Mon, 27 Mar 2023 19:46:44 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=1501 Bank of America honors groups as 2022 Neighborhood Builders By Community News Releases – January 10, 2023 Programs and services in Miami-Dade County addressing homelessness and supporting the arts and culture community will expand, helping more people chart a path toward economic opportunity with help from a multi-year grant from Bank of America. Sundari Foundation […]

The post Bank of America honors groups as 2022 Neighborhood Builders appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Bank of America honors groups as 2022 Neighborhood Builders

NB1-min

Programs and services in Miami-Dade County addressing homelessness and supporting the arts and culture community will expand, helping more people chart a path toward economic opportunity with help from a multi-year grant from Bank of America.

Sundari Foundation Inc.’s Lotus House and Nu Deco Ensemble (NDE) have been named as the 2022 Bank of America Neighborhood Builders awardees for their work in the Miami-Dade community removing economic barriers and advancing economic opportunity.

Each organization receives a $200,000 grant over two years, comprehensive leadership training for the executive director and an emerging leader on topics ranging from increasing financial sustainability, human capital management, and strategic storytelling.

Recipients join a network of peer organizations across the U.S. and get the opportunity to access capital to expand their impact. The program continues to be the nation’s largest investment into nonprofit leadership development.

“Nonprofits are the backbone to our local community as they are on the ground working closely with individuals, families, and community members to understand the obstacles many are experiencing and developing programs and services that will help alleviate or eliminate these barriers, helping them chart a path toward economic opportunity,” said Gene Schaefer, president, Bank of America Miami. “It’s important that we direct not only capital, but the necessary resources and training to help position these nonprofits and their leadership team for long-term success as they grow strategically and make a positive impact.”

Lotus House is dedicated to improving the lives of women, youth, and children experiencing homelessness in Miami-Dade County. The organization will use their grant funding to help with the development of a new Children’s Village facility. Expected to open in 2024, the Children’s Village is a holistic children’s resource center addressing the needs of Miami-Dade children and youth impacted by racial, ethnic, educational, health, and economic disparities and inequities. The Village will offer educational and therapeutic support, enriched programming, social services, and a wide range of community resources to heal, empower, and uplift the children, youth, and families of Lotus House.

“Bank of America has been our steadfast partner in shared mission and service for more than a decade, helping to make all we do possible,” said Constance Collins, president and executive director, Sundari Foundation Inc. “We are so grateful for their support and excited to receive this impactful award to expand our work together to develop Lotus House’s new Children’s Village for the children and families of our beloved Overtown neighborhood.”

Nu Deco Ensemble creates compelling and transformative genre-bending musical experiences that inspire, enrich, and connect new and diverse audiences and artists. The grant will allow NDE to hire additional staff specifically focused on development, marketing, and production/operations. These strategic hires will help advance the organization by furthering fundraising initiatives, enhancing the organization’s voice and presence, and assisting with growing productions and internal operations. Additionally, NDE will be able to grow its live and virtual programs, education, and outreach initiatives in support of Miami-Dade County’s musicians and creatives.

“This support from Bank of America comes during a critical moment for Nu Deco Ensemble.

This grant will help us significantly grow our capacity, allowing us to hire more key staff, and build out our musical infrastructure providing increased flexibility to bring our music to the greater community, both in person and digitally,” said Sam Hyken, CEO of Nu Deco Ensemble. “We are incredibly grateful and humbled to be selected as one of this year’s Neighborhood Builders and want to thank everyone from Bank of America for being a champion and supporter of the arts and culture in our community.”

In Miami-Dade County, 30 nonprofits have been selected as Neighborhood Builders since 2004, with the bank investing more than $6 million into these local organizations.

The invitation-only program is highly competitive, and organizations are selected by a committee comprised of community leaders and past Neighborhood Builders honorees.

Through 2021, Bank of America has invested over $280 million in 50 communities through Neighborhood Builders, partnering with more than 1,400 nonprofits and helping more than 2,800 nonprofit leaders strengthen their leadership skills. Neighborhood Builders is just one example of how Bank of America deploys capital in communities, builds cross-sector partnerships, and promotes socioeconomic progress as part of its approach to responsible growth.

The post Bank of America honors groups as 2022 Neighborhood Builders appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Seeds of Change https://lotushouse.org/seeds-of-change/ Mon, 07 Nov 2022 15:00:13 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=1977 Seeds of Change

The post Seeds of Change appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Seeds of Change

The post Seeds of Change appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Miami makes $200K donation to the country’s largest shelter for women and children https://lotushouse.org/miami-makes-200k-donation-to-the-countrys-largest-shelter-for-women-and-children/ Fri, 02 Sep 2022 16:18:00 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=689 Miami makes $200K donation to the country’s largest shelter for women and children The city of Miami has donated $200,000 to Lotus Village, the nation’s largest shelter dedicated to women and children, for job training programs. The money comes from a larger $3.1 million allocation of federal funds by the city government toward programs to […]

The post Miami makes $200K donation to the country’s largest shelter for women and children appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Miami makes $200K donation to the country’s largest shelter for women and children

 

The city of Miami has donated $200,000 to Lotus Village, the nation’s largest shelter dedicated to women and children, for job training programs. The money comes from a larger $3.1 million allocation of federal funds by the city government toward programs to help people experiencing homelessness, part of a plan promoted by Mayor Francis Suarez to reduce homelessness to “functional zero.” Suarez announced the donation Tuesday in Overtown, where he and other officials were led on a tour of the shelter by Constance Collins, Lotus Village’s founder and president. “This is our community. It shows love. It shows compassion. It shows we care about each other,” Collins said during a press conference. “And at the end of the day, the greatness of a city is not measured by how high its buildings are. It is measured by how we treat those who have the least.” Collins and her team have grown Lotus Village from 34 beds in a run-down apartment building to a five-story facility with 500 beds and a host of social services readily available on site for women and children with no place to go.

The announcement came days after the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust released the results of its twice-annual census, which suggested that the number of people experiencing homelessness may be on the rise. “It’s more important than ever that we redouble our efforts,” Suarez said, adding that the census count reinforces the need for the $3 million investment in an array of social programs. The mayor, whose political advisers have been floating the possibility of a Suarez presidential campaign based in part on his record in Miami, said he plans to hold several more press conferences to announce other donations. Suarez also acknowledged the recent controversy over the city’s efforts to create several dozen “tiny homes” for the homeless on Virginia Key, an initiative that has been put on hold. Suarez said he worked with Commissioner Joe Carollo, who has advocated for more aggressive measures to remove homeless people from public areas, to push for the city to hold off on the project for at least six months. “Now we’re putting this money to work,” he said.

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/downtown-miami/article265057314.html#storylink=cpy

 

The post Miami makes $200K donation to the country’s largest shelter for women and children appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>
Lotus Village’s founder: An idealist who has produced real world results. ‘I had to act’ https://lotushouse.org/lotus-villages-founder-an-idealist-who-has-produced-real-world-results-i-had-to-act/ Sun, 08 May 2022 11:04:00 +0000 https://lotushouse.org/?p=723 Lotus Village’s founder: An idealist who has produced real world results. ‘I had to act’ BY LINDA ROBERTSON MAY 08, 2022 6:00 AM   https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article260813637.html When she was a young girl visiting New York City, Constance Collins came upon a homeless woman bundled up against the cold, digging through trash in a dumpster for food.  […]

The post Lotus Village’s founder: An idealist who has produced real world results. ‘I had to act’ appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>

Lotus Village’s founder: An idealist who has produced real world results. ‘I had to act’

BY LINDA ROBERTSON

  •  

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article260813637.html

When she was a young girl visiting New York City, Constance Collins came upon a homeless woman bundled up against the cold, digging through trash in a dumpster for food. 

“I thought, ‘How can any one of us be happy when so many of us are suffering?’ ” she said.

Years later, when Collins was a high-powered real estate investment firm executive and attorney in Miami, she was inspecting a high-rise construction site when she came upon a homeless woman bathing in the building’s new fountain. 

“I knew if I truly cared I had to act,” she said. “I would actually have to do something myself.”

She decided to build a homeless shelter for women. She quit her job and with her own money bought a dilapidated, 50-year-old, three-story apartment building in Overtown. Somehow, with her characteristic attention to detail, pink and periwinkle paint and art donated by an art collector friend, she made it homey, inviting. Women living on the street, fearful of shelters primarily occupied by men, sought out Collins’ safe space. 

She named it Lotus House, “where hope blossoms.”

Since then, 34-bed Lotus House has been replaced by the 500-bed Lotus Village for women and children. The five-story complex on Northwest 15th Street is considered a national model given that 80 percent of its 1,550 guests in 2021 successfully exited the shelter system. The Village offers daycare, medical care, therapeutic care, job training and placement. There are parenting classes and art, music, yoga, meditation and gardening programs.

Collins is now expanding again. She and the Lotus Endowment Fund announced plans to build the $20 million, five-story Children’s Village a block away where Lotus can devote more space and staff to education, enrichment, therapy and counseling programs for youth staying at Lotus and living in Overtown.

“Our kids and moms have experienced the impacts of racism, gender-based violence, disparities in access to education, healthcare and social justice,” she said. “This is an opportunity to address those disparities and enable people to thrive.” 

Collins, 63, never imagined how big Lotus would grow. There’s even a popular thrift shop. She points to her dedicated staff, her donors, her supporters in Miami and Lotus alumni who return to tell her about their college degrees, their jobs, their children, their homes. They point to her, her vision, her compassion, her one-on-one interactions, her mentorship and her genius for collaborative work. 

Collins dislikes attention, deflects praise. Because of her past business success, she works as a full-time volunteer, taking no salary. She would tell you her life is richer today wearing sneakers and a pink Lotus Village T-shirt while counting diapers than it was wearing business suits and cutting multimillion-dollar commercial real estate deals. She would tell you “there is no greater gift than to be in the service of people who need help.”

Her approach to homelessness is typical of her no-nonsense style: “I remember when we walked on the moon. There is no problem we cannot solve.” 

John Sumberg, vice chair of the Lotus board and a Miami attorney, met Collins when she transferred a client to his firm. He asked her what she was doing. When she said she was leaving her lucrative career to build a homeless shelter, he was swept away by her dynamism. He was struck by her idea of calling women “guests” and creating an art-filled environment where skills training would accompany mental health treatment and meditation classes. He immediately volunteered to handle the land acquisition and zoning applications. 

“You could call her an idealist, but she’s made the Lotus approach work in the real world for the most vulnerable, underserved people,” Sumberg said. “It’s phenomenal to have the national leader in Miami. Thanks to Constance, her creativity and her commitment.” 

When Sumberg first drove to the apartment building, “I told Constance, ‘This is going to be a disaster,’ ” he said. 

“It was in horrible condition, the area was unsafe and the people in the neighborhood were skeptical, asking, ‘What does this white lady know?’ Nobody wants a homeless shelter nearby,” he said. “But she was right. She said everyone would see we were contributing something good to the community. And Lotus has really changed the neighborhood.”

Collins renovated a second apartment building and added mothers and children to the Lotus family. But when she proposed building Lotus Village for $25 million, there were pessimists again. Some said she’d never raise the money. She did. 

She tapped her connections and enlisted local firms to do work for free — such as the architects at Behar Font, the engineers at m2e, the builders at Civic Construction, the lawyers at Bilzin Sumberg. She sought out Miami’s philanthropists and found new donors. She used her financing knowledge. The village was finished on time and on budget and was named the Urban Land Institute’s 2018 Project of the Year.

“So many cities think homelessness is an overwhelming problem that will take huge amounts of money to fix. But Constance has proven there is enough money to solve it,” said Martin Margulies, the developer and art collector who has been Lotus’ biggest benefactor. He and Collins were married briefly. They remain friends.

Collins is a hands-on leader, says her staff. It was her idea to conduct studies at Lotus Village comparing different types of parent-child and trauma therapies. She was appalled that no such research had been done with homeless children, so she contacted FIU psychology professor Paulo Graziano and offered Lotus Village as the perfect setting to do it. 

“Constance was involved in every step, every sentence. She’s even an author on it,” Graziano said. “Sometimes we had disagreements — no, the data doesn’t say that so I can’t write that — but always in a good spirit of teamwork. Most shelters won’t cooperate on trials; it’s too chaotic or their clients don’t stay long enough. Constance understands how important it is to develop evidence-based treatment that works.” 

Born in Detroit, Collins graduated from Trinity College in Connecticut and earned her law degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder. When she’s not at Lotus Village, she enjoys cycling, hiking, kayaking, beach-combing and “all things wilderness.” 

She stays centered via her daily meditation practice, which “is my refuge and reminds me to rest on the firm ground of emptiness.” 

Collins is driven by the hope of her guests and the generosity of Miami.

“I believe we exist to love,” she said. “Being in service, ending homelessness, supporting, nurturing and uplifting women and children is simply about love.”

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article260813637.html#storylink=cpy

The post Lotus Village’s founder: An idealist who has produced real world results. ‘I had to act’ appeared first on Lotus House.

]]>