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:Articles for deletion/Homes for the Homeless (2nd nomination) - Knowledge

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52:. Of note is that while some commentary has dismissed some of the sources as not being usable to establish notability, overall consensus, relative to the overall strengths of the arguments and overall commentary presented herein is for the article to be retained. For example, a user dismissed one of the sources as unusable to establish notability, but then later !voted for the article to be kept, using a guideline-based rationale. The nominator also questioned the sources in a blanket statement, but did not provide analysis of each individual source. Conversely, while AfD is not a vote or vote count, a satisfactory amount of users have stated that there are enough usable reliable sources that provide independent, significant coverage to satisfy notability requirements, countering the nomination for deletion. 938:
John the Divine and the City of New York. Operating in close conjunction with the Institute on Children and Poverty, a research organization, HFH is the nation's largest provider of residential, educational, and employment training centers, serving over 540 homeless families and over 1,100 homeless children each day at four separate sites across New York City. Dubbed American Family Inns, these sites host a network of on-site education, employment, and family support services that address the multiple causes of homelessness. The book under review serves as a convincing rationale for this Tier II shelter approach to the problem of homelessness, at least in so far as it concerns families with children.
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residents receive education, job training, and services ranging from counseling to summer camps. In most traditional shelters, families must go elsewhere for such services. American Family Inns collaborate with community health care providers to provide on-site prenatal and pediatric care, dental care, immunizations, and preventive medicine. The Inns' family reunification program and two crisis nurseries are the only programs of their kind in New York State. These two programs focus on reuniting foster care children with their familieis and preventing foster care placement.
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education, to acquire independent living skills, and to obtain job training before moving into permanent housing. At the same time, their children’s education, recreation, and health care are assured and any family problems are addressed. American Family Inns tap the potential of the transitional shelters; they turn a long shelter stay into a productive, concentrated period of learning, recovery, and preparation, with all of the needed tools and support available on-site (Nunez, 1994).
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pursue their GED and get day care and counseling in one place until they are ready for permanent housing. This is a great program, and one has to wonder why we are still paying a fortune in tax dollars to house families in seedy motels when that money should be going toward expanding the shelters that work. The city should be donating properties seized in tax liens to Homes for the Homeless. Its Web site is www.homesforthehomeless.com.
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necessary to building an independent life: adult education and literacy, job training, accelerated after-school programs, psychological counseling and child care. Its Institute for Children and Poverty conducts the latest research on how trends like welfare reform and gentrification impact homeless families. Not only is the vision vast, the results are solid.
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long-term personal goals. Each caseworker counsels twenty families in individual weekly sessions. After a family moves into permanent housing, follow-up programs provide postplacement services for up to eighteen months. Homes for the Homeless reported in 1996 that 94 percent of all families who graduate from American Family Inns remain in permanent housing.
1467:"The reality is that there are a lot of good ideas for the long term, but very few practical solutions for the short term," said Leonard Stern, chairman of Hartz Mountain Industries and a major real estate developer who has formed Homes for the Homeless, a nonprofit group operating 420 transitional-housing rooms for homeless families. 1531:
Homes for the Homeless bought the building in April for $ 3.5 million with the aid of Leonard Stern, head of Hartz Mountain Industries and the owner of The Village Voice. The organization received two loans from Chemical Bank totaling $ 4.5 million for the sale and renovations. The loans were secured
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Real estate developer and hotelier Leonard Stern, a major donor to New York University, founded the group in 1986 after he saw some homeless people sleeping in City Hall Park. And he seems to be passing on his commitment to doing good in New York through his daughter, Andrea Stern, a photographer who
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The American Family Inns are Residential Educational Training (RET) Centers for the entire family. The Inns were developed by Homes for the Homeless in 1986, with the idea that all necessary services can be cost-effectively and efficiently provided for families, under one roof. Homes for the Homeless
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The not-for-profit group, Homes for the Homeless, will operate its shelters under contract with the city. Mr. Stern, who helped form the group, is its treasurer. The chairman of the group is Basil Paterson, the former Secretary of State of New York and The Rev. James P. Morton, dean of the Cathedral,
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The organization's five American Family Inns in New York City provide temporary shelter for about a year, with 90% of occupants in permanent housing two years after their inn term ends. The inns are also centers of education, job training, and counseling. On a typical afternoon, a parent is studying
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Since this magnificent pioneering program was started in 1986 by Leonard Stern, chairman of the Hartz Group, more than 18,000 homeless families and 30,000 homeless children have received emergency transitional housing under its auspices. In addition to housing, Homes for the Homeless offers services
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This week marks the 20th anniversary of Homes for the Homeless, the nation’s largest provider for homeless families. The tragedy of homelessness so often proves intractable despite the best intentions of local and federal governments. Thousands of children, whose average age may be no more than six
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Stern turned outrage into inspiration and founded Homes for the Homeless, a non-profit organization which finds safe and affordable housing for homeless people. Stern's role, as he put it, is to bridge the gap between the people with good ideas and no money and the people with no ideas but lots of
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Homes for the Homeless (HFH) is a New York City-based program designed to find long-term solutions for homeless people in New York. HFH created an innovative and successful program—a network of residential, educational, and employment training centers called the American Family Inns—which has been
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The four American Family Inns in New York City serve over 540 families every day. Each family has a unique service plan that considers the family's individual and collective past, and its goals for the future. A caseworker helps each parent and child within the family develop and pursue short- and
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THE buildings used by Homes for the Homeless include a former Holiday Inn in Queens, a hospital in the Bronx and a nursing home on Staten Island. It is providing day care, an alternative high school for residents who have dropped out, exercise equipment, arts and crafts classes and other programs
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Homes for the Homeless (HFH) was founded in 1986 by businessman Leonard N. Stern (who made his fortune developing the Hartz Mountain pet supply business begun by his father and later in extensive real estate development in the New York metropolitan area) in collaboration with the Cathedral of St.
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Homes for the Homeless was founded by Leonard Stern in 1985 to provide clean, safe, and humane transitional housing for families. This organization presently has five shelters - entire buildings with tight security and strict guidelines. The shelters are de facto communities where residents can
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The success of the American Family Inn demonstrates that shelters need not serve merely as waiting rooms between temporary bouts of housing. As a result of this education-based program (provided at the same cost as operating a traditional shelter in today’s emergency shelter system), 94% of all
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In 1986 Leonard N. Stern founded Homes for the Homeless to offer hope to New York City's homeless mothers and children. Founded on Stern's belief that inadequate education is the root cause of homelessness, this private nonprofit group built the American Family Inns—transitional housing wherein
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must be addressed (Nunez, 1994). The American Family Inn offers comprehensive educational and training programs, which are supported by on-site services such as child care, family counseling, medical clinics, and substance abuse counseling. Parents are given the opportunity to complete their
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Homes for the Homeless works with the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. There are two phases to the project. In phase one, homeless people move into family inns. There are now three family inns that house 1,500 people a night. Mr. Stern described a Homes for the Homeless Inn to
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Leonard Stern will be honored this week for his humble and dignified stewardship of this remarkable organization, which he alone created more than 20 years ago. He has shown that one man, with courage and compassion, can change the lives of thousands who might otherwise give up
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Mr. Stern's program, like more than two dozen other temporary housing projects, is at the center of a controversy among advocates for the homeless, some of whom argue that the temporary programs divert money and volunteer resources from efforts to create permanent, subsidized
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Mr Stern, chairman, of Hartz Mountain, a real estate, pet food and publishing group, set up Homes for the Homeless two years ago. The non-profit organisation has bought so far three buildings with loans guaranteed by Hartz. Together, they house 420 families, or about 1,500
267:) 21:33, 8 May 2020 (UTC) I cleared out some things in the article and the sources, because while those sources were reliable and what they said, they were generic comments about homelessness that doesn't relate to the organization and doesn't have contextual connection. 1524:
After an anonymous caller made threats against the building, officials of Homes for the Homeless asked the police to provide 24-hour protection. For the last two weeks, at least one police car has been parked in front of the building, keeping regular
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More than enough references that meet the criteria for establishing notability can be found. From the list posted by Cunard above, references 1, 3 and 5 (didn't bother to check any others) are satisfactory. Topic is notable, meets GNG/NCORP.
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If politicians and goverments feel the need for lessons in banging heads together, they might try Nancy and Alexander Abraham and Leonard Stern. Distressed by bureaucratic delay, the three New Yorkers have taken their own initiative to open
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The New York project has moved well beyond the emergency mentality surrounding homelessness to provide a long-term strategy, with the leadership and commitment of all levels of government, as well as the non-profit, foundation and corporate
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A private nonprofit organization that is the nation's largest single provider of residential education services to homeless families. Its American Family Inns transitional housing facilities serve homeless mothers and children in New York
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The residence is owned by the Manhattan-based nonprofit organization, Homes for the Homeless. Officials of the organization said about 100 more families are expected to move in within two months, reaching a capacity of up to 350
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The concept is modelled after Leonard Stern's New York's Home for the Homeless, established in 1986. Its program of intensive and sustained assistance boasts a 94 per cent success rate of moving families out of hostels and into
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Recently, Mr. Stern has worked closely with Andrew Cuomo, the Governor's son, on other homeless projects, including one called Help I, which will initially provide 420 small apartments as temporary living quarters for homeless
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In November, the first of 10 families will begin moving from various hostels into a temporary site for Beatrice House, a residential family education centre. The pilot project is a personal tribute to Northey's late maternal
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used as a model for permanent solutions to homelessness. HFH is affiliated with the Institute for Children and Poverty, and together they conduct research studies to uncover strategies for fighting poverty and homelessness.
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The "book" cited was a court proceeding/publication, which is a document of public processes, not a secondary coverage. Some of the reliable sources that mention this thing only do so in passing. I recommend deletion.
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years old, still sleep in New York City homeless shelters on any given night. Homes for the Homeless has proven that there is a way out of the cycle with its innovative residential, educational and training services.
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A non-profit called “Homes for the Homeless” is booting tenants — including a 99-year-old Holocaust survivor — from its senior citizen housing complex in Manhattan, right around the holidays, The Post has
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Walking down the Prospect Family Inn's "Main Street" corridor, residents are just steps from social workers, a wellness clinic, a day-care center, job training, even advice on starting their own business.
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Just FYI The second reference fails ORGIND in that it points to a *review* of a book. While the review was written by Lehmann, the *book* was written by the CEO of the topic company - so fails ORGIND.
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Leonard Stern, chairperson of the HartzMountain Corporation and founder of Homes for the Homeless, the largest single provider of transitional housing and services for homeless families in New York
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It previously ran a homeless shelter for families at the building for 20 years before shutting it down in 2015 and converting the building into the senior housing facility, which opened last year.
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So far, 15 single-parent families have moved into the brown and white brick structure just off the waterfront in Midland Beach, a working-class community that was a resort area in the 1930's.
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are those items in the list automatically populated from phrase search? Appearing in a list of "organizations to contact" that lists out numerous businesses don't count towards notability.
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Despite the opposition of neighbors, a privately run temporary residence for homeless families was opened last week in a four-story building on the south shore of Staten Island.
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is the more appropriate standard for companies and non-profits, because this is a category that is especially prone to promotional and public relations editing. See
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The group was founded by pet toy and real-estate honcho Leonard Stern of Hartz Mountain industries, with its principal mission to provide housing for those without.
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will open within six weeks in the building that formerly housed Prospect Hospital in the South Bronx. It will hold 80 families or 300 people in private rooms.
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Homes for the Homeless also operates a housing complex for seniors on Staten Island, as well as three homeless shelters, two in the Bronx and one in Queens.
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The senior center charges about $ 4,000 for a one-bedroom apartment, but provides three meals a day in a communal dining room and pays the utility bills.
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The Family Inn model combines housing with an array of social services to help residents reintegrate into the workforce and move on to regular housing.
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is the vice chairman. Board members include Ethel Kennedy, Gloria Steinem, and Rabbi Balfour Brickner of the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue in Manhattan.
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The group - formed by the Cathedral of St. John the Divine and Leonard N. Stern, a businessman - said the first shelter or
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believes that to effectively break the cycle of homelessness and poverty, the underlying issues that lead to homelessness
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These criteria, generally, follow the general notability guideline with a stronger emphasis on quality of the sources to
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So Nunez left his government job in 1986 to found Homes for the Homeless with a grant from philanthropist Leonard Stern.
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Mandor, Samantha; Barclay, Laurel; Zachary, Jonathan (1988-03-19). "By children for everybody Home is where...".
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Mandor, Samantha; Barclay, Laurel; Zachary, Jonathan (1988-03-19). "By children for everybody Home is where...".
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for his GED while his teenager is playing in a basketball league and his toddler sister is in daycare.
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Homes for the Homeless operates four so-called Family Inns throughout the city, serving 555 families.
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significant coverage in multiple reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject.
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designed to make families more independent and better able to manage an apartment of their own.
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Homes for the Homeless held its first fund-raising gala this year to mark its 20th anniversary.
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families who graduate from the American Family Inns remain in permanent housing (Nunez, 1995).
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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below.
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
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It charges $ 100 a night per family, with the bills paid by city, state and Federal agencies.
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
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prevent gaming of the rules by marketing and public relations professionals
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Handbook of Mental Health Services for Children, Adolescents, and Families
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Handbook of Mental Health Services for Children, Adolescents, and Families
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The article includes quotes from the president of Homes for the Homeless.
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The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate.
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to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
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Articles for deletion/Homes for the Homeless (2nd nomination)
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Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Homes for the Homeless
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per the significant coverage in multiple independent
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Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, â™ 
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Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved
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Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved
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No further edits should be made to this page. 1485:"Shelter on Staten Island Opens With Opposition" 781:"Shelter on Staten Island Opens With Opposition" 323:Note: This discussion has been included in the 303:Note: This discussion has been included in the 283:Note: This discussion has been included in the 1043:Homeless in America: How Could It Happen Here? 514:Homeless in America: How Could It Happen Here? 305:list of Companies-related deletion discussions 991:"Private Group Prepares Housing for Homeless" 487:"Private Group Prepares Housing for Homeless" 325:list of New York-related deletion discussions 241: 8: 1362:Campanile, Carl; Henry, Jacob (2019-12-10). 1133:Walsh, Mary E.; Jackson, Julie Heim (2005). 717:Campanile, Carl; Henry, Jacob (2019-12-10). 575:Walsh, Mary E.; Jackson, Julie Heim (2005). 121:Help, my article got nominated for deletion! 75:Articles for deletion/Homes for the Homeless 1550:, which requires "significant coverage in 805: 322: 302: 282: 1546:to allow Homes for the Homeless to pass 1441:"Breaking New Ground in Housing Policy" 808: 756:"Breaking New Ground in Housing Policy" 72: 971:Leonard Stern's Homes for the Homeless 7: 898:Lehmann, Susan P. (November 2004). 423:Lehmann, Susan P. (November 2004). 71: 24: 1542:There is sufficient coverage in 106:Introduction to deletion process 1439:Lueck, Thomas J. (1989-04-30). 1266:was the mastermind of the gala. 754:Lueck, Thomas J. (1989-04-30). 18:Knowledge:Articles for deletion 989:Basler, Barbara (1986-07-03). 914:Johns Hopkins University Press 485:Basler, Barbara (1986-07-03). 439:Johns Hopkins University Press 1: 1323:Oram, Roderick (1987-09-27). 1272:Turner, Janice (1998-08-01). 1196:"The City's Homeless Problem" 819:Criswell, Sara Dixon (1998). 691:Oram, Roderick (1987-09-27). 665:Turner, Janice (1998-08-01). 615:"The City's Homeless Problem" 381:Criswell, Sara Dixon (1998). 1493:. 1987-09-27. Archived from 1194:Colon, Alicia (2005-10-07). 953:. 2006-05-08. Archived from 789:. 1987-09-27. Archived from 613:Colon, Alicia (2005-10-07). 469:. 2006-05-08. Archived from 1230:Gordon, A.L. (2006-05-11). 1083:Egbert, Bill (2004-06-27). 639:Gordon, A.L. (2006-05-11). 545:Egbert, Bill (2004-06-27). 96:(AfD)? Read these primers! 1794: 1040:Doak, Melissa J. (2006). 511:Doak, Melissa J. (2006). 1767:Please do not modify it. 1758:13:50, 21 May 2020 (UTC) 1743:19:13, 20 May 2020 (UTC) 1720:16:14, 17 May 2020 (UTC) 1682:08:05, 17 May 2020 (UTC) 1588:13:50, 21 May 2020 (UTC) 1569:08:05, 17 May 2020 (UTC) 1149:10.1007/0-387-23864-6_18 591:10.1007/0-387-23864-6_18 364:23:17, 15 May 2020 (UTC) 277:07:53, 10 May 2020 (UTC) 59:06:12, 22 May 2020 (UTC) 32:Please do not modify it. 1418:New York Amsterdam News 746:New York Amsterdam News 337:21:33, 8 May 2020 (UTC) 317:21:33, 8 May 2020 (UTC) 297:21:33, 8 May 2020 (UTC) 1534: 1480: 1435: 1411: 1358: 1319: 1274:"Hope is on the house" 1268: 1225: 1190: 1129: 1079: 1036: 985: 940: 894: 887:Homes for the Homeless 878: 864:Homes for the homeless 667:"Hope is on the house" 130:Homes for the Homeless 70:AfDs for this article: 65:Homes for the Homeless 1509: 1465: 1426: 1388: 1349: 1298: 1256: 1220: 1171: 1113: 1074: 1015: 969: 967:The editorial notes: 950:The New York Observer 935: 922:10.1353/hpu.2004.0067 884: 861: 466:The New York Observer 447:10.1353/hpu.2004.0067 94:Articles for deletion 1174:American Family Inns 1507:The article notes: 1463:The article notes: 1424:The article notes: 1386:The article notes: 1347:The article notes: 1296:The article notes: 1254:The article notes: 1218:The article notes: 1111:The article notes: 1090:New York Daily News 1013:The article notes: 933:The article notes: 810:Sources with quotes 552:New York Daily News 1490:The New York Times 1446:The New York Times 996:The New York Times 879:The book notes on 786:The New York Times 761:The New York Times 492:The New York Times 1540: 1539: 1232:"Out & About" 1157:978-0-306-48560-2 641:"Out & About" 599:978-0-306-48560-2 366: 339: 319: 299: 111:Guide to deletion 101:How to contribute 1785: 1558:of the subject". 1552:reliable sources 1544:reliable sources 1505: 1503: 1502: 1461: 1459: 1458: 1449:. 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Index

Knowledge:Articles for deletion
talk page
deletion review
North America
06:12, 22 May 2020 (UTC)
Homes for the Homeless
Articles for deletion/Homes for the Homeless
Articles for deletion/Homes for the Homeless (2nd nomination)

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How to contribute
Introduction to deletion process
Guide to deletion
glossary
Help, my article got nominated for deletion!
Homes for the Homeless
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