TERRE HAUTE —
Two stark reminders to our community emerged in separate stories on the front page of Wednesday’s Tribune-Star.
In one, Indiana’s new governor, Mike Pence, labeled the state’s 20-percent child poverty rate “unacceptable” and “heartbreaking.” The situation is more pronounced in Terre Haute, where more than 1 of every 4 kids under 18 years of age lives in a poverty-stricken family.
Another story described the jump in the number of homeless people seeking shelter at the Light House Mission, a haven on Wabash Avenue. As winter temperatures drop, the Mission’s population rises.
In many cases, a thin line separates families from the struggles of poverty in their own residence and homelessness. A lost job, broken relationship, catastrophic medical bills or the death of a spouse financially unravels an individual or family. Some experience a domestic-violence incident, mental illness or addictions. With nowhere else to turn, they can find food and warmth at the Light House Mission.
The label “homeless” may conjure images of someone far from the situations considered normal to most people. Some statistics, available through the Mission website, verify the homeless are not alien at all. The two fastest-growing segments of the homeless population — which numbers 21,200 on any given night throughout Indiana — are intact families and single women with children. Twenty-one percent are veterans. Seventeen percent have jobs. Thirty-five percent have never been homeless before.
The facility opened in 1890 and aims to “aid, assist, and care for homeless individuals by providing shelter, food, clothing, education, and emergency services without regard for race, color, sex, national origin, religion, age, disability, or medical condition.” In addition, the shelter offers residents faith-based recovery services and tries to equip them to lead productive lives.
The task is greatest in January and February as winter sets in.
In last week’s story, Light House Mission director Bonnie Wallace told reporter Lisa Trigg how frigid temperatures drive families to leave houses they can’t afford to heat. “I’ve heard stories of single mothers with children trying to heat their home with an open oven,” Wallace explained.
Sadly, donations drop off just as the need intensifies, as people in the community cut back on charitable contributions to pay off Christmas and holiday debts. That reality is understandable. For those who have a little extra funds or time, there are various ways to help.
Volunteers are needed 365 days a year for the Mission and its women’s shelter, Connor’s Center, through food preparation and serving, painting, cleaning, carpentry and yard care. To volunteer, call 812-232-7001.
Donations make a difference, too. Perishable and non-perishable foods are needed, along with personal hygiene products, household cleaning supplies, basic medical supplies, T-shirts, socks, towels, washcloths, blankets, sheets and pillows. Those can be dropped off at the facility at 1450 Wabash. Monetary contributions can be made online at thlhm.org.
Mild weather may arrive for a few days, but bitter cold frequently follows in this season. As one Mission resident said, “I’m glad I’m not outside right now.”
As a community, let’s rally in this peak time of need to support the people and services who keep the Mission doors open for all.
Editorials
TRIBUNE-STAR EDITORIAL: A mission for us all
We need to help the Light House fight poverty
- Editorials
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The celebration season
Spring has been a bit elusive at times in 2013, which is its nature.
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news: MVC tourney an event worth having
It’s been a long time since the Missouri Valley Conference chose Indiana State University to host its post-season baseball tournament, but Terre Haute had never been more prepared for an event such as this.
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EDITORIAL: Cleaning up voter rolls
It’s not a lot of money in the big scheme of things, but the $2 million designated in the recent session of the General Assembly will begin the messy but necessary process of cleaning up Indiana’s voter registration rolls.
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EDITORIAL: Waging the ‘readiness’ campaign
Almost every Hoosier who starts college intends to finish. Unfortunately, those who arrive on campus unprepared in key academic areas are far less likely to fulfill that aspiration.
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EDITORIAL: Insult to an independent press
Distrust of government secrecy has been elevated to an exceptional level with the disclosure the Justice Department covertly examined two months of Associated Press phone records to determine who leaked details to the AP about a foiled terrorist plot.
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news: Dashing finish for the Sycamores
It’s always thrilling to see Indiana State University’s athletic teams do well in high-level competition, and two specific teams rose to impressive heights last weekend in the Missouri Valley Conference outdoor track and field championships.
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EDITORIAL: Better monitoring needed to prevent local environmental messes
The nasty, hazardous messes lurking in the community raise a bottom-line, red-flag question. Could these environmental problems have been monitored and, thus, prevented?
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EDITORIAL: Memo to U.S.A.: You can ‘SPPRAK’ just as we do in Vigo County
Our kids, truly, are ‘Making a Difference’
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Some words in praise of boring government — Indiana’s
A conservative Republican governor has super majorities in both branches of the legislature. One might suspect such one-party government leads to major changes in public policy. This did not happen in 2013 in Indiana.
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EDITORIAL: Doc’s prescient prescription
Viewed through a 2013 prism, Doc Bowen’s response to the AIDS epidemic looks merely prudent, routine.
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EDITORIAL: Education remains worth the cost
Within the next few weeks, each of the local colleges will have conducted graduation ceremonies. A few days later, a different Class of 2013 will don caps and gowns for commencement — the seniors at five Vigo County high schools. It is still a smart, worthy aspiration for those high school grads to replicate the achievement of those college students by earning a higher-education degree.
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EDITORIAL: Good news for downtown
For decades, it seems, downtown Terre Haute has been in the throes of change
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EDITORIAL: Overall, state budget step in the right direction
For average Hoosiers uninterested in political point-scoring, the budget crafted by the Indiana Legislature inspires only muted, if any, fanfare.
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EDITORIAL: The lessons of organ donation
The range of emotion surrounding life-saving transplantation of a vital organ is extreme. It is the ultimate “good news-bad news” scenario.
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READERS’ FORUM: April 26, 2013
• Pence’s tax cuts benefit wealthiest
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
This does not qualify as a surprise in any way. But the Wabash Valley’s response to widespread flooding of recent days has been nothing short of impressive, even inspirational.
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EDITORIAL: Still waiting for the jobs reward
The forces in control of Indiana government for most of the past decade need to show some results to Hoosiers in one primary category.
Good-paying jobs. -
MARK BENNETT: Littered with irony: Why do people callously discard their trash, and who are they?
Though they aren’t acknowledged by the U.S. Census Bureau, there are basically two demographic groups of people … Those who would dump their old toilet on the banks of the Wabash River or a rural roadside. And those who wouldn’t.
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EDITORIAL: Doing the dirty work to clean up tossed trash
A first-of-its-kind, coast-to-coast project to remove litter from U.S. roadsides brought the Pick Up America crew through the Wabash Valley two years ago.
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EDITORIAL: Keep school security a local issue
The decision to provide armed security inside a schoolhouse should be made locally.
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
Indiana’s parks need your help.
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EDITORIAL: The return of terror
Emotions today remain strong and raw in wake of Monday’s terror bombings near the finish line of the Boston Marathon.
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EDITORIAL: A solution to distracted driving … stop it … now
You’ve got to stop. You know you do it. It’s a miracle you haven’t caused a tragedy already.
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EDITORIAL: ‘Women of Influence’: 2013 selectees have given much to their communities
For the second year, United Way of the Wabash Valley has teamed up with local sponsors to select and honor a group of women who have made outstanding contributions to their communities, professions and families.
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news: A new honor for our veterans
A commendation goes out today to state Rep. Clyde Kersey, a Terre Haute Democrat who led the charge this week in the Indiana House of Representatives to pay tribute to the nation’s Purple Heart recipients.
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EDITORIAL: Shifting view on marriage
One could argue, as many have, that Sen. Joe Donnelly did the right thing last week when he dropped his support of government-sanctioned opposition to same-sex marriage. It wasn’t a radical move, considering most Democrats have now made the switch.
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MAX JONES: The American Newspaper: Changing? Yes. Dying? No way!
It happened again this past January when all those “looking at the year ahead” stories started popping up on Internet “news” websites and broadcast “news” programs. Under a provocative headline reading something like “Five industries/businesses doomed to tank in the coming year,” there it was, a prediction based on an unsubstantiated “expert” analysis that the newspaper industry will continue in 2013 to suffer its slide into oblivion.
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EDITORIAL: A chance to change our bad cultural habits
The sight of diligent, eager young people dragging trash out of the Wabash River wetlands is both inspiring and sad.
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EDITORIAL: Maintaining high standards
Standards
It’s the raging buzzword in education circles these days. Everyone insists that higher standards must be met. Anything less is, doggone it, unacceptable. -
Noteworthy in the news
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The celebration season




