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STREETS
NEW SP APER
Our
Positivity
Issue
Issue 108
$1
One Dollar suggested donation.
Your donation directly benefi ts the vendor.
Please only buy from badged vendors.
Cover Art by Jess Telmanik, https://positivedoodles.com
Where is YOUR Happy Place?
Art Director Ed Conn put the
question out to local community
members: Where is your happy
place?
Individuals at Sunshine
Live Life Positively Sunshine
has touched so many lives
through residential, vocational,
supported employment and
therapeutic programs.
Page 4
Page 5
INSPIRING HOPE • FOSTERING COMMUNITY • CULTIVATING CHANGE
Toledo Streets is a member of the International Network of Street Newspapers
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STREETS
NEW SP APER
3
4
4
5
P 9 YAAW
7
6
Where is your happy place?
Walking the “in town”
alleys of Perrysburg.
Dean Kasperzak
P 4
8
Cover Art: Jess Telmanik is a
multidisciplinary designer who believes in the
healing power of creativity. A mental health warrior
and constantly evolving human being, she seeks to
inspire others that it’s never too late to fi nd a voice
and catch a vision. Her innovative outlook and
passion for digital and traditional illustration shines
through her vibrant artwork that serves as a reminder
that it’s okay to be human. Her happy place is
anywhere near water (pond, lake, waterfall, ocean).
"Calms my soul to the core."
9
11
12
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Page 2
Director's Desk
Positivity and Hope I fi rmly
believe that in any situation we
have a choice to seek to fi nd
the positive or the negative,
writes Claire McKenna, Vendor
Manager.
Where is Your Happy
Place in NW Ohio? Art
Director Ed Conn put
the question out to local
community members: Where
is your happy place?
Oak Openings Scout
Trail The echo of pileated
woodpeckers knocking on
hollow trees, the sight of a
dozen deer leaping over fallen
trees, the symphony of early
spring frogs preparing for
mating season – these can all be
experienced in a walk along the
Oak Openings Scout Trail.
Discover New Practices:
Exercises for a Better You
3 excellent exercises from the
Greater Good Science Center.
World Happiness Report
Finland again the happiest
place on Earth.
Need a Dose of
Positivity? Look No
Further Than These
Books at the Library It
might be hard to stay positive
with, you know…everything.
But hope and optimism are
what drives the human spirit.
Individuals at Sunshine
Live Life Positively
Sunshine has touched so
many lives through residential,
vocational, supported
employment and therapeutic
programs.
Young Artists at Work +
Positivity = YAAWSITIVITY
Every industry had to innovate
to meet the safety
guidelines. That’s what artists
do—get creative.
A Shot in the Arm for
Homeless San Franciscans?
Holistic Hands Wellness
Gallery So how does one
connect with a sense of
positivity and hope while
chaotically fl ailing about in a
sea of overwhelm?
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By Claire McKenna
Positivity seems to be a bit of a buzz word lately, in my opinion.
But I fi rmly believe that in any situation we have a choice to seek to
fi nd the positive or the negative. Granted, lately the positive has been a
little more diffi cult to uncover, but I promise you it is there. I think this
is a great time for this issue and a time for refl ection about the positive
aspects of our lives.
As spring quickly seems to be announcing its arrival, new
growth happens everywhere, including TSN. We have often seen an
infl ux in new vendors and vendor sales as the world starts to step out into
the sunshine again. Last year we didn’t experience that infl ux for obvious
reasons and I was concerned that we may not experience a spring increase
this year because things have been so different. But, sure enough,
I have seen new vendors joining the team, old faces popping back up after
months of no contact, and papers leaving the offi ce faster than before.
In this pattern, I fi nd positivity because, no matter what, some things stay
the same.
This year holds special meaning because of the last twelve
months. This time last year we did not get to experience the revival of
community activities and the opportunity to soak up the sunshine with
those closest to us. Although we may not be completely back to normal,
there is a change in the atmosphere around Toledo Streets Newspaper as
more and more vendors get the opportunity to get vaccinated. We’re also
hearing announcements about larger events returning.
Here at Toledo Streets Newspaper, we are beginning talks of
how we can open up our space again as an intentional place for acceptance
and community while keeping everyone safe. We are excited to
see the positivity that will come out of vendors getting to experience our
newness of our offi ce with the comfort of family. It is exciting to know
that all the hard work put in by so many people is about to be experienced
and enjoyed.
And yet, I am struck with the feeling that although there are
exciting and positive things coming, the positivity never left our TSN
community. It may be weird to say but I think people experiencing
homelessness were both the most affected and least affected people by
the pandemic. Many of their resources were cut down and many weren’t
eligible for the limited support that was available for the majority of the
population. However, I think they were better prepared for hardship and
more adaptable. Each one of them has been forced to overcome adverse
situations and have remained hopeful.
To me their continued hope through diffi cult times is the epitome
of positivity. Positivity in our community is not necessarily always being
“sunshine and roses,” but instead making it through the hard days with
a hopeful and positive outlook that better days are coming. Positivity in
our community is also reveling in the smaller moments. Moments that
remind us of the good things in life and the human compassion that surrounds
us. Whether that’s getting a favorite pudding fl avor in a Thursday
lunch provided by donors or someone tipping $5.00 and a smile for the
paper. Positivity isn’t something new or shiny here. It is an ever-present
force both on the micro and macro level that keeps us moving.
The Buck Starts Here
Toledo Streets and its vendors are a powerful, community driven solution
to the problem of homelessness. Our vendors earn their way out of their
individual situations through a collaboration of journalism, local business
partners and their own hard work. Use these four steps to be a part of the
solution.
Meet
Vendors
Buy a
Paper
Get
Informed
Take
Action
• Vendors -- the people who sell the paper -- are at the
core of Toledo Streets' mission. Each year more than
70 indiviuals work as vendors with Toledo Streets. At
any given time, more than 25 vendors are at work, in
the rain, snow, or heat. Vendors play an active role in
the management of TS, meeting regularly to discuss
issues of concern and even serving on our board.
• With the money made selling the newspaper, vendors
are able to secure basic needs, independence
and dignity, and work toward obtaining housing.
Vendors buy papers for a quarter and sell them for a
$1, keeping all income and tips for each sale.
Toledo Streets tries to tie its editorial to three basic
principals:
• Inspiring Hope, Fostering Community, and Cultivating
Change. We are a member of INSP, our global
organization of street papers around the world
which provides us with content relevent to social
justice, homelessness, and street community around
the world.
• Donate to the organization and give vendors experiencing
homelessness and poverty a hand up. It
supports not only the paper but also issues throughout
NW Ohio.
• Volunteer your time and expertise and help the
organization grow.
• Share Toledo Streets with your network, and tell
people about the organization.
Page 3
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text, and strangely enough, I received
a lot more instant responses
than when I asked for help moving
an old couch up from the basement.
People here really like to
share their happy places.
Where is Your
Happy Place in
NW Ohio?
By Ed Conn
As the TSN staff and volunteers
prepare for Issue 108 and
the theme of Positivity, I started
pondering on the question, Where
is my happy place in this corner
of the world? I thought immediately
of the Maumee River and
my intimate relationship with this
body of water, the largest feeder
river into Lake Erie. Saga and I
live along the western banks of
the Maumee and benefi t from the
gorgeous views every day: sunrises
to the left and sunsets to the
right. Straight out our deck we can
see Audubon Island, host to a few
pairs of nesting bald eagles, and
nature’s Airbnb to visiting mergansers,
mallards, tundra swans, blue
heron, and others traveling North
and South along the Mississippi
Flyway.
Toledo Lucas County Libraries
The smell of books still gets me.
As a kid growing up down the
road from the Maumee Branch, I
spent many summer days in the
quiet stacks or perusing through
the card catalog looking for a book
to take me on an adventure.
As an adult I’m amazed at how
easily I can order exactly what
I want: a mystery based in the
Middle Ages, research about a
local event or historical building,
cookbooks, how-tos and lots of
movies and music. Most of all, I
know I can count on a librarian to
guide me on where to fi nd what
I’m looking for – even the most
obscure.
The Library is also the hub for
activities that will be coming back
soon: STEM events and reading
clubs for kids, guest speakers, arts
activities, even a cookbook club.
Library membership is free. Sign
up! Karen Gerhardinger
Without a doubt, my “happy
place” is rowing on the Great
Maumee River, especially early
in the morning when the river
is as smooth as glass and all you
can hear is the birds chirping
even though we are in downtown
Toledo.
Steve McNally
Weber’s Restaurant on the patio
by the river on a Sunday afternoon
with live music. Thursday night’s
jazz in the garden at the Botanical
Garden. Old West End walking,
biking or driving around looking
at the architecture. The beach at
Maumee Bay. It’s hard to choose
just one. Pam Weirauch
Upon refl ection…any of the
Metroparks. Michael Galbraith
I kayak on the river during the
warm season, and if the ice is solid
enough, snowshoe out the island,
300 yards from my home, and a
thousand miles from any thoughts
of chaos, strife, and craziness.
Pre-pandemic, I rowed on the river
with the Toledo Rowing Club,
sitting starboard side smack in the
middle of an eight-person sweep
boat pulling our way on weekday
evenings to the I-75 bridge and
back to International Park.
Page 4
Walking the “in town” alleys of
Perrysburg. Dean Kasperzak
Cruising on a boat on the Maumee
River. The Cloisters at the
Toledo Museum of Art.
Patrice Spitzer
Outside of being anywhere with
the people I love, my happy places
are the museum, Metroparks, symphony
concerts and walking on the
river downtown. Kathleen Davis
Anywhere by water. I’m particularly
fond of Swan Creek and
Middlegrounds Metroparks.
Arika Michaelis
I would say anywhere I could get
comfortable with a good book.
Or walking in our beautiful parks
listening to nature while watching
spring unfold. These things make
my heart happy. Terri Camp
On the river; in our boat. Nick
Camp
One of mine is defi nitely the
Crane Creek preservation area.
Curiously, there’s a little grove
of unmarked gold dawn redwood
sequoias growing out there that I
loved fi nding. Also the protected
beach there has the most amazing
outcrop of well preserved fossils
in huge limestone boulders, also
being a peaceful place.
Deanna Metts
Oak Openings Metropark. Erin
Peterson
In my rowing shell launching from
Toledo Rowing Club at the dock.
Ann Broderick
If you asked me about a year
ago, I'd say the metro parks.
Today, as hatred towards immigrants
escalates and after
being called names while we
walked through our beloved
metro parks, our happiest/safest
moments are spent in our own
home - behind locked doors.
Anonymous, Immigrant turned
citizen
Oak Openings
Scout Trail
By Karen Gerhardinger
The echo of pileated woodpeckers
knocking on hollow trees, the
sight of a dozen deer leaping over
fallen trees, the symphony of early
spring frogs preparing for mating
season – these can all be experienced
in a walk along the Oak
Openings Scout Trail.
The 17-mile trail around the exterior
of the Western Lucas County
park is one that I tackled in one
eight-hour day with my husband
early in the pandemic, but continue
to take on in segments several
times a week. From oak stands and
prairie to sand dunes and Swan
Creek tributaries, the trail offers a
chance to really get away from it
all – especially as it’s less traversed
than the shorter trails.
One day I sat on a bridge and
marveled at the sunlight illuminating
bubbles popping up from a
log submerged in the sandy bottom
of a creek. During another walk I
spotted a Cooper’s Hawk circling
over a pond that appears each
spring for frog mating. In the winter
it’s not unusual to see the prints
of coyote, deer, fox and rabbits
crisscross the path.
Getting away takes only a pair of
decent hiking boots (bring plastic
bags to cover your feet in case you
encounter wet areas), some water
and snacks. Hike for a few hours
or the whole day and come back
Fostering
Community
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New
Practices
3 Exercises for a
Better You from
the Greater Good
Science Center
e) break down the job into subtasks:
take everything out of the
closet, sweep the fl oor, dust the
shelves, get rid of stuff that you
don’t need anymore, sort the
things that you want to keep and
put them in boxes, put the boxes
back in the closet;
f) remind yourself that it’s OK if
you don’t do everything perfectly,
or complete the entire task.
Deliberate Practices
for Kids
Time Required
Deliberate practice is a technique
that your children can engage in
whenever they want to develop a
diffi cult skill. You can offer some
guidance on how to do it, particularly
when you see them struggling
and in need of encouragement.
These conversations can take anywhere
from fi ve to 30 minutes.
How to Do It
Kids practice to reach all kinds of
goals—writing their names, dribbling
a basketball, playing a song
on the guitar. Deliberate practice
is a research-based technique that
will make their practice sessions
more effective so they can improve
over time.
Goal Visualization
A way to tackle a daunting task
Time Required
10 minutes daily for 3 weeks
How to Do It
Identify one goal that you would
like to achieve in the next day
or two and briefl y describe it in
writing. Make sure that this goal is
realistic and not too time-consuming
(e.g., “tidy up the hall closet”
rather than “clean the entire house
top to bottom”) and something that
is important to you (e.g., “spend
more time with the kids” rather
than “learn about the life cycle of
the common fl y”).
To help you visualize how you
will go about accomplishing this
goal, describe in writing the steps
that you will take to get there. For
example, if your goal is to tidy up
the hall closet, these are the steps
that you might take to achieve it:
a) schedule one hour tonight that
you will devote to cleaning;
b) turn off your cell phone/other
distractors;
c) put on some comfortable
clothes;
d) turn on some upbeat music;
Teach your kids these four principles
of deliberate practice:
Work on weaknesses: Rather than
doing things that they already do
well, children should focus on the
things that are hard for them. For
example, they might replay the
part of their trumpet solo with the
high notes that they’ve been having
trouble with, rather than the
parts that they know well.
Give full concentration: Teach
children to avoid distractions that
Rethink failure: Teach your children
that failure is a normal part of
learning by modeling comfort with
mistakes. Share your experiences
of failure with your children, so
they learn that we all fail sometimes—and
these failures teach us
lessons that help us in the future.
Rethink frustration and confusion:
Teach your children that frustration
and confusion are a natural
part of practice. Encourage them
to see these feelings as signs that
they are in the “stretch zone,” the
space that helps us develop new
skills.
Rethink talent: Read books, watch
TV interviews, or listen to podcasts
with your children that focus
on how musicians, athletes, or
actors work on their craft to be
successful. Talk to your children
about how their favorite players
or actors spend many hours practicing
and getting feedback from
their coaches or directors. Remind
your children that they too can
improve by seeking feedback and
taking the time to practice.
Share the experience: Encourage
your children to share their experiences
of failure, frustration,
practice, and success with friends
and family. Ask them to refl ect on
the value of practice and how they
are learning not only to expect that
failure, frustration, and confusion
will be part of the process, but to
feel more comfortable with those
experiences along the way.
make it hard to stay on task, like
noise, social media, or people
nearby. Instead of writing an essay
with their phone beside them while
hanging out with friends, they
might go to a quiet library and
tuck their phone in their backpack.
Get feedback: Encourage children
to fi nd out what they got right and
where they made mistakes by asking
a teacher or coach or checking
their work. For example, if they
made mistakes on their long-division
homework, they might review
their work again and talk to their
teacher about how they can solve
those problems correctly in the
future.
Repeat until mastery: Encourage
children to keep working on their
weaknesses, stay on task, and get
feedback until they master their
specifi c goal.
Because deliberate practice is
hard, you can offer a few tips to
help motivate your children to
engage in it:
Best Possible Self
Foster Optimism by Imagining
a positive future
Time Required
15 minutes per day for two weeks
How to Do It
Take a moment to imagine your
life in the future. What is the best
possible life you can imagine?
Consider all of the relevant areas
of your life, such as your career,
academic work, relationships,
hobbies and health. What would
happen in these areas of your life
in your best possible future?
For the next 15 minutes, write continuously
about what you imagine
this best possible future to be.
Use the instructions below to help
guide you through this process.
It may be easy for this exercise
to lead you to examine how your
current life may not match this
best possible future. You may be
tempted to think about ways in
which accomplishing goals has
been diffi cult for you in the past,
or about fi nancial/time/social barriers
to being able to make these
accomplishments happen. For the
purpose of this exercise, however,
we encourage you to focus on the
future—imagine a brighter future
in which you are your best self and
your circumstances change just
enough to make this best possible
life happen.
This exercise is most useful when
it is very specifi c—if you think
about a new job, imagine exactly
what you would do, who you
would work with and where it
would be. The more specifi c you
are, the more engaged you will be
in the exercise and the more you’ll
get out of it.
Page 5
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e urgently need to learn from
Covid-19,” said Jeffrey Sachs,
Columbia University professor
e
C
Colum
and di
Sustai
pande
and director of the Center for
Sustainable Development. “The
In a Lamentable
Year, Finland Again
is the Happiest
Country in the
World
World Happiness Report
2021 Looks at Relationship
Between Well-being
and COVID-19
NEW YORK, March 19 -- The
2021 World Happiness Report
marks a somber moment as
COVID-19 continues to rage on a
little more than a year since it was
declared a pandemic by the World
Health Organization (WHO).
More than two million people
have died worldwide and the
threat of variants and uneven policy
decisions on how to respond
has created uncertainty in what
the future holds. But despite this,
there is hope that the end game is
in sight, as vaccine rollout steadily
increases while many continue
to adhere to mask mandates and
physical distancing.
This year’s Happiness
Report was faced with a unique
challenge in trying to understand
what effect the pandemic has had
on subjective well-being and vice
versa. Of all the factors usually
supporting happiness, the most important
for explaining COVID-19
death rates were people’s trust in
each other, and confi dence in their
governments.
pandemic reminds us of our global
environmental threats, the urgent
need to cooperate, and the diffi -
culties of achieving cooperation
in each country and globally. The
World Happiness Report 2021
reminds us that we must aim for
wellbeing rather than mere wealth,
which will be fl eeting indeed if
we don’t do a much better job of
addressing the challenges of sustainable
development.”
Every year the World Happiness
Report normally compiles
data from the previous three years
of surveys. We do this to increase
the sample size and keep the confi -
dence bounds smaller. Looking at
each country from 2018-2020, we
fi nd these 10 are the happiest in
the world :
Finland
Denmark
Switzerland
Iceland
Netherlands
Norway
Sweden
Luxembourg
New Zealand
Austria
This year, however, because
of the pandemic, we thought
it would be interesting to also
report how countries fared in 2020
only. We note that the one year
samples are small enough, and the
top country scores are so close,
that the differences between nearby
countries are not statistically
signifi cant. Here are the top 10:
Finland
Factors helping to account
for the variation between countries
included: the age of the population;
whether the country was
an island; and proximity to other
highly-infected countries. Cultural
differences played a key role
as well, including: confi dence in
public institutions; knowledge
from previous epidemics; income
inequality; whether the head of
government was a woman, and
even whether lost wallets were
likely to be returned.
“The East Asian experience
shows that stringent government
Page 6
Iceland
Denmark
Switzerland
Netherlands
Sweden
Germany
Norway
New Zealand
Austria
(Note: Luxembourg was not surveyed in
2020 and is represented by its 2018-19
survey in the offi cial rankings)
It comes as no surprise as
Finland once again takes the top
spot as the happiest country in the
world according to survey data
taken from the Gallup World Poll.
It has always ranked very high on
the measures of mutual trust that
have helped to protect lives and
livelihoods during the pandemic.
The rankings overall remained
very similar to last year.
“Surprisingly there was
not, on average, a decline in
well-being when measured by
people’s own evaluation of their
lives,” said John Helliwell. “One
possible explanation is that people
see COVID-19 as a common, outside
threat affecting everybody and
that this has generated a greater
sense of solidarity and fellow-feeling.”
The
report looks to answer
a key question: “Why the different
COVID-19 death rates across the
world?” Death rates were very
much higher in the Americas and
Europe than in East Asia, Australasia,
and Africa.
“This has been a very
challenging year, but the early data
also show some notable signs of
resilience in feelings of social connection
and life evaluations.” said
social psychologist Lara Aknin.
policies not only control Covid-19
effectively, but also buffer the
negative impact of daily infections
on people’s happiness,” said Shun
Wang, professor, KDI School of
Public Policy and Management.
Mental health has been
one of the casualties both of the
pandemic and of the resulting
lockdowns. When the pandemic
struck, there was a large and immediate
decline in mental health in
many countries around the world.
Estimates vary depending on the
measure used and the country
in question, but the qualitative
fi ndings are remarkably similar.
In the UK, in May 2020, a general
measure of mental health was 7.7
percent lower than predicted in the
absence of the pandemic, and the
number of mental health problems
reported was 47 percent higher.
“Living long is as important
as living well. In terms of
well-being-years per person born,
the world has made great progress
in recent decades which even
COVID-19 has not fully offset,”
said Richard Layard, director of
the Wellbeing Program at London
School of Economics and Political
Science.
As one would expect with
lockdowns and physical distancing,
the pandemic had a signifi cant
effect on workforce well-being.
Falling unemployed during the
pandemic is associated with a 12
percent drop in life satisfaction.
“Strikingly, we fi nd that among
people who stopped work due to
furlough or redundancy, the impact
on life satisfaction was 40 percent
more severe for individuals that
felt lonely to begin with,” said
Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, director
of the University of Oxford’s
Wellbeing Center. “Our report also
points towards a ‘hybrid’ future of
work, that strikes a balance between
offi ce life and working from
home to maintain social connections
while ensuring fl exibility for
workers, both of which turn out
to be key drivers of workplace
well-being.”
׉	 7cassandra://ElA5kHPxbh77wNdcan8Nvzrm9xV0kJVTXzvaFHY5yeg"`̶ `b~>-׉EVNeed a Dose of Positivity? Look No Further Than
These Books from the Library.
by Franco Vitella
It might be hard to stay positive
with, you know…everything.
But hope and optimism are what
drives the human spirit. It’s what
will get us out of this pandemic
(along with wearing your mask
and vaccinations) and when things
look bleak, turn to a book to pick
you up.
Factfulness: Ten
Reasons We’re
Wrong About the
World - And Why
Things Are Better
Than You Think
by Hans Rosling
Things aren’t as bad as they seem!
That’s not just a bit of optimism,
but an objective truth when you
look at the facts. In this book, Professor
of International Health Hans
Rosling examines how so often we
tend to get things wrong when the
facts state otherwise. After reading
Factfulness, you’ll begin to
realize that for the most part, you
don’t really know anything, and
that much of what you assume is
based biases…and realizing that is
a positive thing.
Nothing is Wrong
and Here is Why:
Essays by Alexandra Petri
Washington Post satirist Alexandra
Petri delivers this collection of
essays that tries to explain American
politics. If you feel like you’ve
been living in a play right out of
Theatre of the Absurd or are confounded
by the surreal nature of
everything we’ve experienced this
past year (and are OK laughing
about it), this is the book for you.
Because hey, despite all our troubles,
underneath is a silver lining
of truth, humor, and good vibes.
Everyday Ubuntu:
Living Better
Together, the African
Way
by Mungi Ngomane
The Danes have hygge. Norway
has koeslig. Sweden has lagom.
Japan has wa. Those concepts of
coziness, balance, and order all
have their place, but for something
more all-encompassing, look no
further than Ubuntu, a Xhosa word
with origins in South African philosophy
that ties all of us together.
Ubuntu is the idea that we are all
connected through our collective
humanity, and we don’t need to
live with division and discord.
Can’t Even: How
Millennials Became
the Burnout
Generation
by Anne Helen Petersen
While it’s not a positive thing to
dig into generational trenches,
Petersen makes a strong argument
Page 7
how the one thing millennials have
in common is burnout. Millenials
are a generation saddled by debt,
driven to maintain a social media
presence, and confronted by endless
tasks and to-do lists. Among
the negativity though, is hope for a
better way of living.
The Book: On the
Taboo Against
Knowing Who You Are
by Alan Watts
Watts, who was best known for
introducing scores of Westerners
to Eastern philosophies, presents
a distillation of different ideas that
arrives at a simple conclusion: we
view ourselves as isolated, when
we are instead part of everything.
As much as a manual for how to
be a person if anything else, The
Book is offers a way to rethink
your outlook on life and reframe it
in a positive light.
WE’RE OPEN – IN-PERSON,
GRAB & GO, ONLINE
All Library locations are open
for computer and WiFi access
as well as browsing. If you’ve
been enjoying Grab & Go Pick
Up, Book Bundles, Zoom reference
appointments and other new
services, don’t worry - they are all
still available!
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Live Life Positively
By Lana Smucker,
Communications
Coordinator, Sunshine
Communities
March 2021
Positivity overflows at
Sunshine Communities. Sunshine
is a non-profit organization in
northwest Ohio supporting people
of all ages with developmental and
intellectual disabilities. Founded
over 70 years ago, Sunshine has
touched so many lives through
residential, vocational, supported
employment and therapeutic programs.
While
Sunshine has grown
to support dozens of homes within
the community, there are nine
living areas right on our Maumee
campus supporting individuals
who are more medically fragile.
Each living area is named after a
type of quilt pattern, an ode to our
connection with the Mennonite
denomination. One of those areas
named, “Pine” is where 12 amazing
individuals live and exude happiness,
despite the many obstacles
that have come in their lives.
Life in Pine can look
different than most people in our
community. Many individuals
supported in Pine are wheelchair
users, and require staff support
to do everyday tasks. When the
pandemic came into our lives last
year, Pine, like all Sunshine areas,
took precautions very seriously.
But precautions haven’t
hindered Pine from keeping busy,
connected, and having fun. Hunter
uses Skype to call his Mom
every evening at 7:30 p.m., and
sees her through window visits
on the weekends. Aaron is close
with his father, who visits on the
weekends and uses Skype to call
with extended family in Florida.
Joel connects virtually with his
parents and recently enjoyed a car
ride with them, a familiar family
activity that left Joel beaming.
While life with developmental
disabilities can seem un-relatable
to some, individuals in Pine
experience many of the same obstacles
shared by the broader community.
Skylee is a hardworking
student navigating the transitions
of virtual and in-person learning.
She’s been able to return to school
in-person for four days a week at
her new school as a junior high
student. This year she is receiving
services to help utilize her talking
device, walker, and doing exercises.
When
Pine individuals
aren’t connecting with loved ones
or finishing school work, movie
nights can commence. They can
all watch together on the TV in
their living room, while some
prefer certain genres. Eric, Charles
and Joel love comedies, cracking
up the whole time. So much so,
that they are proud owners of Step
Brothers t-shirts. Aaron and Ryan
enjoy watching The Proposal and
like the scene when Sandra Bullock
learns a dance.
Jackie, a direct support
professional, and Sarah, a medical
technician, are just two of the
many dedicated staff that support
the Pine home. They started this
tradition of movie nights to bring
everyone together.
“We let the individuals
pick out the movie by asking them
if they would like to watch it, and
get their reaction,” Jackie said.
It has become a regular event for
Friday and Saturday nights.
At Sunshine, staff are
important parts of everyday life,
resulting in close bonds with the
individuals they support. Not only
do staff provide support, but they
go above and beyond with creativity
and innovation. Nicole, a
residential manager, recently held
a Walk-A-Thon with a hallway
and backyard scavenger hunt, and
custom t-shirts which she hand-lettered
in her spare time.
“We oftentimes form a
plan at the beginning of the shift
for instance, today, we decided at
the beginning of the shift that after
dinner we were going to bowl.
Each individual got a couple turns
and it brought out so many smiles
and much laughter. Pine is full of
positivity. We try so hard to keep
the individuals busy with activities
and celebrate even the smallest
victories!” Sarah said.
Positivity and contagious
smiles aren’t in short supply in
the Pine home. Whether you’re at
Pine, at another Sunshine home,
or just relating in your community,
people with developmental disabilities
will bring positivity into your
life.
Page 8
׉	 7cassandra://jYACLlUvfvc09PDlZgSBlo9Sf4y_hsJAQux1EspX1Y8%V`̶ `b~>/׉E(Young Artist at
Work + Positivity =
YAAWSITIVITY
from home. With schools closing,
a racial reckoning and an
election, the whole team had much
to express. These young people
made art to process their
experience and got paid to do it.
To speak more about the first-hand
apprentice experience, I
reached out to a very positive
2020 YAAW Apprentice, Ma’laya
Edwards.
What does positivity mean to
you?
Positivity overall like if you show
positivity to other people, that support
and love blocks out all
the negativity and lifts up one
another.
How can art be a vehicle for
positivity?
It has been one year since
the World Health Organization declared
the coronavirus a pandemic
and the last twelve months have
been grueling. From the fear of
uncertainty to the unrelenting
news cycle, to the new normal,
we’ve adapted. In times that are so
grim, we savor every crumb
of joy we can get. People find
ways to feel a sense of control like
baking bread or writing a pen
pal. When the entire world has
been disrupted, taking time to be
thankful is the simplest way to
gain perspective. Practicing gratitude
daily is an act of self-preservation.
In this time of
uncertainty, I’ve remained grateful
to retain employment with an
organization that helps make
Toledo a more fun place to live.
The Arts Commission works to
build a creative and cultural community
in Toledo, inspire
vibrancy in our neighborhoods,
and to celebrate life through art.
The Arts Commission
promotes art through programs
like Art in Public Places, Art Loop,
Creative Placemaking,
Artist Services, Young Artists at
Work (YAAW) and the Momentum
festival. All of these
programs bring people together to
celebrate art. Almost overnight,
gathering was prohibited
to prevent viral spread.
Every industry had to innovate
to meet the safety guidelines.
That’s what artists do—get
creative. In lieu of the Art Loop
events, curated Art Boxes were
made available for people to
take home and try techniques from
local artists. The Momentum Festival
shifted to a safe
and discoverable format to encourage
Toledoans to explore— including
new murals in
partnership with Art in Public
Places. Artist Services quickly
pivoted to offer artists
emergency relief grants for those
who lost income. With support
from the City of Toledo and
Lucas County, Jordan Buschur meticulously
coordinated the granting
of over $425,000 to
area artists in need. Talk about
making lemonade. Positivity can
seem like a nonrenewable
resource, but it’s really more like a
contagion.
By summer, it still wasn’t
absolutely safe to work in person
and Young Artists at Work had to
stray from its model too. Since
1994, the Arts Commission has
hired teenagers each summer to
make art, make friends, and make
money. For the first time in 26
years, the YAAW program had
to go virtual. With help from the
Toledo Lucas County Public Library,
each apprentice was able
to work from home with iPads.
Even though this was the first remote
program, the apprentices
were able to create a 65-ft photography
installation, a mural design
and a portrait series to
celebrate the 100th Anniversary
of the formation of The League of
Women Voters, and the
Ratification of the 19th Amendment.
This was the first job for
many of the apprentices and the
first time any of us were working
Art is a vehicle for positivity
because in art there is no right or
wrong and you can’t judge people.
Everyone expresses their feelings,
thoughts and opinions through art.
In my opinion, all art is
positivity because it expresses that
person whether it’s through paper,
music, or dance.
Expressing yourself in any way is
always positive because everyone
needs to get out whatever
they have inside.
Can you talk about how the
2020 YAAW program was a
positive experience?
It allowed people from all different
cultures and regions to get together
and do something that
they all have in common. YAAW
allows you to meet new people,
share thoughts, discoveries,
and techniques. We all accepted
each other. I really felt at home in
that program because there
was no judging and everyone was
accepting of each other’s art. I
was hesitant about applying
because of the pandemic, but it
was still enjoyable and creative.
Is there anything you want
people to know about you,
YAAW or positivity?
Positivity is essential in life.
Always try to keep a positive
attitude.
Art heals us on an individual level
and beautifies our city and this
creates a hopeful future. It’s a
positivity butterfly effect. When
we see that someone has created
art in a place, we care about it
and feel it’s cared for. We can do
this together on a personal level
and a civic level. Everyone
walks away from the summer
with something different. Some
teens build confidence in their art
skills, find their voice as a leader,
or make a dear friend. Young Artists
at Work has evolved over
the years, but almost anyone who
goes through the program can tell
you, it’s a fun job that
shows the arts as a reasonable career
and it’s an overall formative
and positive experience.
To view YAAW artwork
or for more information, please
visit theartscommission.org.
Artwork by: Dylan Smith
Page 9
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SERVICES FOR
THE HOMELESS
At the Mildred Bayer Clinic for the Homeless, we provide FREE services:
• Adult Primary Care
• Dentistry
• COVID-19 testing
• HIV Testing and Counseling
• Pregnancy Testing
• Blood Pressure Checks
• Physicals
• Prescription Assistance
• On-site Vision Center
• Pharmacy Services
• Blood Sugar Checks
• Flu Shots
• 24 hour Nurse Triage
• Social Services
• Hygiene Kits
• Change of Clothes
Services are provided by a team of board-certified providers.
Eligibility for services:
• Living on the street
• Staying in a shelter or transitional housing
• Doubling up (staying with a friend or family member)
MONDAY – FRIDAY: 8:00 A.M. – 4:30 P.M. (DROP IN AND APPOINTMENT) • 1415 JEFFERSON AVENUE (CLINIC ENTRANCE ON 15TH ST.) TOLEDO OH, 43604 • 419-241-4230
Page 10
׉	 7cassandra://EXdZgjaB-SgnYz-2ACDLyKTYmC8YJbitr4--TGNOvcI#,`̶ `b~>1׉EqInternational Network of Street Papers
recommend three or four weeks
between doses, depending on the
vaccination.
A drop-in clinic at Zuckerberg San
Francisco General Hospital will
also serve unhoused seniors regardless
of ZIP code or insurance
status, according to the City’s plan.
But what’s still fuzzy is the exact
timeline for vaccinations. Brian
Edwards, a human rights organizer
at the Coalition on Homelessness,
which publishes Street Sheet, has
been involved in the planning with
City officials for the past month.
“There’s no firm date” when the
rollout will reach the homeless
population, he said. “I suppose it’s
because of the supply of the vaccine,
but they’re just not moving
fast enough.”
Photo credit: SF Chronicle
A Shot in the Arm for Homeless
San Franciscans?
Different countries are rolling out
their COVID-19 vaccine stocks to
different demographics at different
rates. In the US, the picture is
even more complicated: with no
top-down governmental approach,
individual states are working off
their own plans. A report from
Street Sheet about how homeless
people in San Francisco will be
able to get the jab.
By TJ Johnston
Where homeless people fit
in the Golden State’s plans to vaccinate
residents against COVID-19
has been in flux for the past month.
San Francisco officials — as well
as houseless San Franciscans —
might have to wait longer than expected
for things to fall into place.
Last month, the state reorganized
the phases of its prioritization
plan to immunize Californians.
Health care workers — the highest
prioritized group in the plan
— had already started receiving
vaccinations. The next phase of
the state’s original plan included
unhoused and incarcerated people,
who would have been getting
shots alongside people aged 65 and
over, and essential workers such as
educators, child care providers and
food and agricultural workers. But
as of publication time, they’re not.
That changed when the state
announced a new prioritization
system early last month. While
most unhoused people still qualify
— most are over 65 or have disabilities
or other underlying health
conditions — confusion reigned
over homeless people and service
providers alike as to how soon vaccine
supplies will come their way,
not to mention when they will get
their shots.
The vaccine would provide
protection against the coronavirus
and its variants for a population
already rendered medically vulnerable
from living without stable
housing.
When Street Sheet contacted
the San Francisco Department
of Public Health about when
vaccines will be given to homeless
folk, DPH replied with a statement
from the City’s COVID Command
Center, a collaborative of several
City departments, saying it’s still
waiting for guidance from the state.
On 24 February, the department
and Command Center
released their vaccination
plan, which will hinge on mobile
teams visiting congregate settings
and outdoor sites. These include
shelters, permanent supportive
housing sites, shelter-in-place and
isolation/quarantine hotels, encampments
and “safe sleep” sites.
“A guiding principle of this work
will be bringing the vaccine to
Page 11
people who are not able to easily
access traditional settings like a
doctor’s office or pharmacy,” the
Command Center said in a statement.
The
two groups added that
the San Francisco Health Network,
UC San Francisco and assorted
community organizations would
assist in outreach.
Once vaccine recipients receive
their first dose, health workers
hope to record the vaccinations
electronically, follow up on the recipients’
conditions and ensure they
receive a second dose. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
Frontline SIP hotel and
shelter workers are included in
Phase 1A of the vaccine rollout
but did not have reliable access to
vaccines until 15 February. Based
on contacts he made with service
providers, Edwards estimated a
majority of shelter staff aren’t yet
vaccinated, possibly because the
information of eligibility hasn’t
reached them.
“There should be a big
fucking sign [at the shelters]” to
direct front-line workers and homeless
people to where they can get
vaccinated, he said.
One positive development Edwards
found is the public health department’s
inclusion of permanent
supportive housing residents in its
plan.
“The people (at DPH) decided
that people in PSH sites can
be homeless, too,” he said.
Courtesy of Street Sheet / INSP.
ngo
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Rebecca Przybylski, MDiv., Integral
Associate Coach™
Core Member and Practitioner with
HHWG
Around the world over the
last 12 months we have all been
through an extraordinarily disruptive
season. From youngest to
oldest, it seems no one has been
able to escape the interference of
the global pandemic. Countless
changes, transitions, and layer upon
layer of losses have ceaselessly
bombarded us for over a year now.
So how does one connect with a
sense of positivity and hope while
chaotically flailing about in a sea of
overwhelm??
I have certainly been doing
my best to navigate this tumultuous
time and sometimes it does feel like
I’m sinking under the weight of it
all. In addition to my own wellness
I am also trying to help my children
and some others find a sense
of ground when almost everything
feels shaky and uncertain. To say
that it has been a struggle is an
understatement.
Recently, while I was reflecting
on my own experience over
the last year I landed on a metaphor
that I have since shared with a
handful of friends.
Living through this last year
has been like riding in the back seat
Page 12
With so much in flux, there
has been one consistently bright
spot for me over the last year. I
have found a place to fan my waning
positivity flame over at Holistic
Hands Wellness Gallery. The folks
who serve in this nonprofit offer an
amazing array of services, many of
with a really bad driver who rapidly
slams down the gas and then quickly
jumps on the brakes, leaving you
lurching back and forth, repeatedly
whiplashed. Never quite sure
when the next lurch is coming, you
inevitably begin to brace yourself
and hold on tight in anticipation
for the next jolt. And after such a
prolonged season of bracing and
tensing, you come to experience a
profound weariness, an exhaustion
penetrating the body, mind and
soul.
In our weary and exhausted
state, what can we do to nurture our
overall wellness and find a way to
reconnect to a spirit of positivity??
Finding times and ways
to gently nurture yourself can be
a doorway into a more positive
mindset. However, sometimes we
really do need help from others.
And honestly, in such a depleted
state it can be a challenge to even
know where to begin looking for
help these days. Many don’t have
the means or insurance to pay for
the help they desperately need or
want.
which have helped me to personally
find a way into greater health, healing,
and hope during this last year.
With services offered both online
and in person I have been able to
access exactly what I have needed.
Holistic Hands opened its
doors over on 2086 Brookdale Rd.
in 2020. That means it’s pretty likely
that most people around Toledo
don’t yet know about the diverse
services being offered by the team.
So, let me give you a peek. Some of
our offerings include: craniosacral
therapy, crystal bowl sound baths
and crystal bowl sound therapy,
massage therapy, reiki, personal
training, yoga, zumba and other
group fitness classes. Additionally,
we have an integrative health
practitioner and dietician who can
run lab work for you. We also have
practitioners who offer transformational
life coaching, meditation
classes, listening groups, retreats,
various pop-up workshops, and
team building experiences.
Holistic Hands Wellness
Gallery, Inc. is a nonprofit community-building
organization that can
easily and comfortably be a home
base for anyone in any religion,
belief system, background, ethnicity
or non-religion. Holistic Hands
is located on the edge of the UT
campus and focuses on providing
opportunities for holistic wellness
to the University of Toledo and
surrounding community.
Holistic Hands encourages,
supports, nourishes and works with
its community members to find
harmony in mind, body, and soul.
We recognize a growing need for
assistance with mental health and
wellness, and we strive to serve
those in need by providing safe
outlets and therapies, as well as
opportunities for artistic expression.
Our goal is to make healing
and wellness opportunities
available and affordable to anyone.
We provide a sliding fee scale and
financial assistance for services if
needed. Holistic Hands is family
friendly, and will offer wellness
opportunities to people of all ages.
For those who are unable to find a
quiet space at home we want you to
take advantage of our outdoor green
spaces, mown labyrinth, swings,
or to simply come and decompress
in the lobby with a coloring sheet
before returning to school or home.
Holistic Hands is committed to
adapting services as the needs of
the community grow and change.
Check out our website www.
HolisiticHandsWellnessGallery.org
to access a full list of our offerings
and services, or give us a call at
(567) 218-3188 to find some additional
support during these trying
times.
׉	 7cassandra://3tVUT9OMIlX4pc1GAXBuMfJv0YxZ0ShKV-y_rG1Dkjc$`̶ `b~>3׉EDirector’s Desk -
Positivity
As we make our way past
the one year mark of the beginning
of the pandemic and quarantine, I
fi nd myself refl ecting on what the
last year has looked like at Toledo
Streets for our community, especially
for our vendors. Between
halting paper sales, a new executive
director, moving offi ces and
an eventual full reopening, our
vendors have been asked to adapt
a lot. And yet in these moments
of uncertainty TSN vendors have
remained resilient.
While this year has been
a lot of change and challenges,
we’ve also taken any opportunity
to celebrate. Toledo Streets Vendor
Week in February reminded TSN
vendors that the community sees
them and loves them. We hung
your words in our offi ce on post-it
notes vendors could take to continue
to encourage them on their path
to fi nancial autonomy. Early this
year, we celebrated vendor manager,
Claire McKenna’s two years at
Toledo Streets with a social distant
party. And while we are in the
planning stages of reopening the
full offi ce, we’re hopeful to celebrate
our ability to gather and cultivate
the community we’ve been
craving since the offi ce closed. It
is within these moments positivity
and joy are abundant.
The past few colder months
have been rough on vendors and
the newspaper program. With
the streets of Downtown Toledo
already lacking the pre-pandemic
bustle, the cold had driven out
most remaining traffi c. Additionally,
vendors had been seeking
shelter instead of slinging papers
causing paper sales to be shockingly
low. In saying this, I’m hoping
when you see vendors out this
month, you’ll not only purchase
a paper but encourage a friend to
purchase one, give more generously
and spend a moment longer to
remind vendors their hard work is
recognized and they are loved.
I AM INCLUDING A ONE-TIME DONATION OF:
� $1000
COVERS COST OF PRINTING ONE MONTH OF TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER
� $500
ELIMINATES BARRIERS TO EMPLOYMENT BY PROVIDING ALL NEW VENDORS WITH VESTS, SIGNS AND BADGES
� $250
SUPPORTS TOLEDO STREETS EMPLOY VENDORS’ CREATIVITY IN STORY-TELLING, POETRY, PHOTOGRAPHY AND
MORE
� $100
� $50
PROVIDES ESSENTIAL SUPPLIES SUCH AS SOCKS, HATS, HAND-WARMERS AND PONCHOS TO TSN VENDORS
SETS 20 NEW VENDORS UP FOR SUCCESS AFTER ORIENTATION BY PROVIDING THEM WITH 10 FREE PAPERS
EACH
� $______
A GIFT AT ANY LEVEL MAKES A DIFFERENCE
NAME ______________________________________________________________
ADDRESS ___________________________________________________________
CITY _______________________________ STATE _______ZIP________________
TELEPHONE ____________________________ EMAIL_____________
� I AM INTERESTED IN RECEIVING EMAIL NEWSLETTERS FROM TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER
� I WOULD LIKE TO BE CONTACTED ABOUT HOW MY COMPANY/ORGANIZATION CAN SUPPORT
TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER
TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER CREATES INCOME OPPORTUNITIES FOR PEOPLE
EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS AND POVERTY BY PRODUCING A NEWSPAPER
AND OTHER MEDIA THAT ARE CATALYSTS FOR INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIAL
CHANGE
Page 13
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THEME: THE 1960s
ACROSS
1. *Kennedy and Ruby
6. Credit card acr.
9. Just in case
13. Yemeni's neighbor
14. Scheduled to arrive
15. *First full-disk image of it was taken in 1966
16. Alleviated
17. Wildfire remains
18. One born to Japanese immigrants
19. *"Catch-22" author
21. *Oscar-winning leading lady of "Mary Poppins"
23. Green or black beverage
24. Piercing woodwind
25. Mom in U. K.
28. ____ and drab
30. Good-for-nothing
35. *TV's Batman, ____ West
37. Figure skater's jump
39. Make happy
40. Hitchhiker's quest
41. *"Wilt the ____" of pro basketball
43. Femur, e.g.
44. Cut it out
46. Away from port
47. Largest organ of human body
48. Like anti-cruelty society
50. Same as #42 Down
52. Even, to a poet
53. Roaster's spot
55. *It's the loneliest number
57. *Sam Walton's company
61. *Haircut popularized by the Beatles
64. Relating to axis
65. PC brain
67. *Sting Ray and Mustang, e.g.
69. Threshing hand tool
70. *"On ____ Majesty's Secret Service"
71. Dostoyevsky's novel, with The
72. Seaside bird
73. Tibetan ox
74. Condemn
DOWN
1. *Hasbro's G. I.
2. Same as ayah
3. Four six-packs
4. Genuflected
5. Sashayed
6. Month of Purim
7. Abscess contents
8. Repair
9. Bear's den
10. Gaelic tongue
11. Meat and potato dish
12. Not that
15. Take to one's heart
20. ____ Grey and James ____ Jones
22. Noggin or dome
24. #24 Across players
25. *____ on Washington
26. Farewell in Paris
27. Address to a woman
29. Just a little
31. Young socialites, for short
32. Call forth
33. *Barbara Eden starred as one
34. *First American astronaut to orbit the
Earth
36. Table in Spanish
38. Type of bargain
42. Best not mentioned
45. Ultimate goal
49. Slightly pointed on a Hobbit
51. Pro bono
54. Scratchy's nemesis
56. Chopin piece
57. Drift
58. Rod for a hot rod
59. One with pants on fire?
60. Street in Anytown, USA
61. Darkness or gloom
62. Relating to ear
63. Poverty-stricken
1960s
Page 14
Solutions
׉	 7cassandra://5OQoMriYTEHXt8kqCoa8su4UFaEnnPtiATm6ya8JrLY(`̶ `b~>5׉E)TOLEDO
STREETS
NEW SP APER
Mail: 1216 Madison Avenue
Toledo, OHIO 43604
TOLEDO STREETS WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT, CORP.
Board of Directors – 2020
Chair
Lauren M. Webber
Treasurer
Candace Bishop
Secretary
Kristy Lee Czyzewski
Ken Leslie
Michelle Issacs
Abby Sullivan
Shannon Nowak
Shawn Clark
Amy Saylor
LaParis Grimes
Wanda Boudrie
Julia Hage-Welsh
a new job, because he lost his old job because of
presiding judge, Leonie Mengel, as he summed up
the case after the two-day trial.
Michael P. has said that he wants to fi nd
attack. “I was drunk,” he admitted in the courtroom.
“Otherwise I wouldn’t have done such a stupid
thing.” P. seemed depressed as he described in
court how he felt that his life had been slipping
through his fi ngers. He has suffered for many years
from a rare nerve disease: problems with walking
and balance are consequences of the disease and
sometimes he is unable to leave the house despite
using medication. The fact that he could only calm
his nerves with alcohol was confi rmed by an expert.
Did the combination of alcohol and pills make him
aggressive? This possibility cannot be excluded,
according to the expert. However, “how [the attack]
actually
happened
remains
unclear,”
said
the
his sentence, mainly as a result of his behaviour after
the attack. While it is true that he ran away on the
night of the attack, shortly afterwards he apologised
to the victim in person on several occasions. And,
although the victim told him that he didn’t need to go
to the police, P. did so a little while later. “I wanted to
take responsibility for what I did,” he said in court.
Sven, his victim, did not appear in court, but later
said in a conversation with Hinz&Kunzt that, “if he
hadn’t contacted the police then they never would
have found him, so he has my respect for that.”
Michael P. only vaguely remembers the
The 27-year-old got off so lightly, in terms of
Seifert, the coroner, in the court proceedings that
were held nearly seven months after the attack. Sven,
a homeless man, had to be taken by ambulance for
treatment in hospital. The sentence for the attacker
was rather mild: he was sentenced to one year and
three months in custody for causing grievous bodily
harm and given a further two years on probation.
This was just what the prosecution asked for. After
he completes his sentence, Michael P. will be a free
man.
“He was incredibly lucky,” said Dragane
he could sleep deeply. It was 6.20pm when a dark
fi gure suddenly appeared in front of him at the
Ohlsdorf station in Hamburg, where he had settled
down to sleep. Then things kicked off. “I was
only just able to prop myself up,” the 45-year-old
remembers. Then came the pain as a 12-centimetrelong
cut was slashed across Sven’s throat. It could
have been fatal.
Vendor Representative
Marthia Russell
Julie M. McKinnon
Ken Leslie
Chris Csonka
Deb Morris
Zobaida Falah
•
Kristy Lee Czyzewski•
•
Treasurer
Lauren M. Webber
Secretary
•
Vice-Chair
Tom Kroma
For Sven, the attack came out of nowhere.
In the evening, he had some drinks so that
By Benjamin Laufer and Jonas Füllner
Ohlsdorf station in Hamburg when he was slashed
across the neck in an unprovoked attack that could
have cost him his life. His life-threatening injuries
were infl icted on him by a 27-year-old, who admitted
that he was drunk at the time of the attack and who
later handed himself into police after running away
from the scene of the crime. Hinz&Kunzt learns
more about the attack and its repercussions.
Translated from German by Hazel Alton
Courtesy of Hinz&Kunzt / INSP.ngo
•
•
•
•
Bryce Roberts
Chair
respect the space of other vendors, particularly the space of vendors who have been at a spot longer, and will position myself at least two blocks away from a working vendor unless
otherwise approved;
45-year-old Sven was sleeping outside
•
“I get scared by
every little noise”:
The aftermath of
a violent attack
•
Board of Directors – 2018
Mail: 913 Madison Street
Toledo, OHIO 43604
CONTINUED FROM P 3TOLEDO STREETS WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT, CORP.
OUR GLOBAL INSP COMMUNITYOur Global INSP Community Page 19
understand I am not a legal employee of Toledo Streets but a contracted worker responsible for my own well-being and income;
•
not buy/sell Toledo Streets under the infl uence of drugs or alcohol;
agree to sell no additional goods or products when selling the paper;
his illness. “I want to get my life back on track,” he
said, after four months in custody. Sven’s life has
been unsettled since the attack last winter. “Sleeping
has changed,” he explains, “I get scared by every
little noise.” Sven would most like to have his own
apartment, or at least a room of his own. When
you have your own place, he says, “you can sleep
properly again.”
agree to treat others- customers, staff and other vendors - respectfully, and I will not “hard sell”, threaten or pressure customers;
only purchase the paper from Toledo Streets staff or volunteers and will not sell papers to other vendors;
agree not to ask for more than a dollar or solicit donations for Toledo Streets by any other means;
All vendors must agree to the following code of conduct to:
The following list is our Vendor Code of Conduct, which every vendor reads through and signs before receiving a badge and papers. We request that if you discover a vendor violating any
tenets of the Code, please contact us and provide as many details as possible. Our paper and our vendors should positively impact the city.
While Toledo Streets is a non-profi t program, and its vendors are independent contractors, we still have expectations of how vendors should conduct themselves while selling and representing
the paper.
Vendor Code of Conduct
understand Toledo Streets strives to be a paper that covers homelessness and poverty issues while providing a source of income for the unhoused and underprivileged. I will try to help
in this effort and spread the word.
understand my badge is the property of Toledo Streets and will not deface it. I will present my badge when purchasing the papers and display my badge when selling papers. I realize
badges cost $1 to replace when lost or damaged;
always have in my possession the following when selling Toledo Streets: my Toledo Streets badge, a Toledo Streets sign, a vendor’s license waiver from the mayor, and Toledo Streets
papers;
agree to only use professional signs provided by Toledo Streets;
Toledo Streets is a monthly publication called a street paper. We
are part of a worldwide movement of street papers that seeks to
provide simple economic opportunities to homeless individuals
and those experiencing poverty.
Our vendors purchase each paper for $.25 and ask for a dollar
donation. In exchange for their time and effort in selling the
paper, they keep the difference. They are asking for a hand up, not
a hand out. By purchasing the paper, you have helped someone
struggling to make it. Not just in terms of money, but also in
dignity of doing something for themselves. We thank you.
FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPHER
Crystal Jankowski
Our Staff
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
John Keegan
WRITING TEAM LEADER
Jonie McIntire
ART DIRECTOR
Ed Conn
Toledo Streets seeks to empower individuals struggling with
extreme poverty to participate on a new level in the community
through self-employment, job training, and contributorship.
Our Mission
Toledo Streets is a registered nonprofi t corporation in Ohio.
While your gifts to the vendors, who are independent contractors,
are not taxed deductible, any donations you make directly to
our organization are deductible. These monies go to supporting
programming, which includes job training and skills development.
Our vendors purchase each paper for $.25 and ask for a dollar
donation. In exchange for their time and effort in selling the
paper, they keep the difference. They are asking for a hand up, not
a hand out. By purchasing the paper, you have helped someone
struggling to make it. Not just in terms of money, but also in
dignity of doing something for themselves. We thank you.
Toledo Streets is a monthly publication called a street paper. We
are part of a worldwide movemment of street papers that seeks to
provide simple economic opportunities to homeless individuals
and those experiencing poverty.
Toledo Streets is a registered nonprofi t corporation in Ohio.
While your gifts to the vendors, who are independent contractors,
are not tax deductible, any donations you make directly to our
organization are deductible. These monies go to supporting
programming, which includes job training and skills development.
Our Mission
Toledo Streets seeks to empower individuals struggling with
extreme poverty to participate on a new level in the community
through self-employment, job training, and contributorship.
Our Staff
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Arika Michaelis
VENDOR MANAGER
Claire McKenna
ART DIRECTOR
Ed Conn
INTERNS
John Brindley, II
Julia Holder
Trinity Episcopal Church
Vendor Code of Conduct
As a vendor representing Toledo Streets Newspaper , I:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
agree not to ask for more than a dollar or solicit donations for Toledo
agree to treat all others—customers, staff,
pressure customers.
agree to stay off
other
private
Toledo
property
and
highway
understand I am not a legal employee of
for my own well-being and income.
Streets Newspaper
vendors—respectfully,
exit
Toledo
under
and
ramps when selling
Streets Newspaper
agree to sell no additional goods or products when selling the paper.
will not buy/sell
the
in luence
agree to only use professional signs provided by Toledo
Toledo
Streets badge, a
Streets
sign,
and
of
but
drugs
will always have in my possession the following when selling Toledo
Toledo
Streets
papers.
understand my badge, vest, and sign are the property of Toledo
them in any way.
Toledo
I
Streets
will
Toledo
a
or
Streets Newspaper.
Streets Newspaper
agree that badges and signs are $5 to replace and vests are $10 to replace.
understand that when you are wearing your vest you are representing Toledo
inappropriate behavior while representing
Streets Newspaper may result
in
Streets Newspaper : my Toledo
will
and
Streets Newspaper,
disciplinary
not alter
thus
action
any
by any
not
contracted
alcohol.
will respect the space of other vendors and will position myself at least two blocks away from a working
vendor unless otherwise approved.
other means.
“hard sell,”
threaten
Streets Newspaper.
worker responsible
or
Page 15
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affordable.
Local produce, meat, dairy and everyday necessities
near downtown Toledo. Committed to offering
affordable, healthy food; delivering nutritional
education; and providing job training opportunities.
Open to everyone. | WIC/SNAP accepted.
1806 Madison Ave.
UpTown Toledo
marketonthegreen.org
Hours:
Mon. – Fri. 8 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Sat. and Sun. 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
© 2019 ProMedica
׉	 7cassandra://Pv87i8Eq-9Z3VPC-b2xrBSPnik6favScsEIw2MShKIQ"t`̶ `b~>7׈E`b~>8`b~>7
,Toledo Streets Issue 108 FINAL `bH^