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Dallas Faith Groups Help Shelter Homeless Texans During Deep Freeze

By Bob Smietana
Cots at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas, Feb. 16, 2021. (Photo Credit: Ali Hendricksen/OurCalling)

Dallas churches and other faith groups have teamed up to help open an emergency warming center for the homeless at the city’s Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.

Freezing temperatures and a rare major snowstorm caused power outages affecting millions of residents of the Lone Star State, leaving many without power or heat as temperatures plunged.

Some communities urged residents to boil water before drinking, and Texas officials are not sure when power outages will end, according to local news reports from Dallas. The Weather Channel reported 17 people had died due to the storm.

The Rev. Wayne Walker of OurCalling, a Dallas-based homeless ministry, said his organization had been providing shelter at its building but became too crowded during the deep freeze. There was not enough space for people to stay warm while still keeping socially distanced.

One Dallas homeless shelter, where about 250 people were staying, temporarily lost power due to the storm, reported The Dallas Morning News. The city has also been relying on local hotels to provide winter shelter for the homeless during the pandemic.

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A man checks for homeless people below a Dallas bridge. (Photo Credit: Ali Hendricksen/OurCalling)

The city of Dallas passed an ordinance last November that allows churches to open as emergency shelters during freezing temperatures. But the continuing pandemic has made that difficult, leading to the decision to open the convention center as a warming station last week.

Walker said his organization is helping staff the shelter, working 16-hour days and staying at a downtown hotel near the convention center. His family is also volunteering while some friends from church, who had lost power, stay at their house.

The first night the center was open, about 100 people showed up, said Walker. On Tuesday (Feb. 16), he expected more than 600 people. Everyone who comes to the shelter is given a COVID-19 rapid test. Those staying at the center are asked to social distance.

Cots unloaded at Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas on Feb. 15, 2021. (Photo Credit: Ali Hendricksen/OurCalling)
 

“The people keep coming,” he said. “I just talked to a mom who had six people in her house and they had no heat. She said it was warmer outside than in their house.”

He said the Salvation Army, Oak Lawn United Methodist Church and other faith groups have arranged for meals and other supplies. OurCalling is also collecting donations through its website. 

“I don’t want people to go to Walmart and buy supplies and try to bring them to us,” he said, citing freezing conditions and treacherous roads. “That’s not very wise.”

Walker said he is glad to be able to lend a hand.

 “We’re able to show people grace and mercy from the hands of Christ,” he said.

The frigid temperatures have also caused hardship at a refugee camp just across the Texas border in Matamoros, Mexico, where hundreds of migrants are waiting to apply for asylum in the United States. Volunteers from Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley have brought blankets, jackets and sleeping bags to the camp, according to Border Report.

“We tell them the best way is to bundle up and be inside their tents that are freezing,” Sister Norma Pimentel told Border Report.

Alma Ruth, the founder of the Texas-based Practice Mercy Foundation, visited the camp this week and posted a video of the shelters that many refugees are living in at the camp. The shelters are tent-like structures, covered in plastic.

A Dallas homeless encampment. (Photo Credit: Ali Hendricksen/OurCalling)

“This is unacceptable,” said Ruth, an evangelical missionary, in a video posted to her Facebook page. “I want you to first pray that the Lord will speed the process so they can apply for asylum in the United States.”

One of the largest congregations in the country, Lakewood Church in Houston, has also opened its doors to serve as an emergency shelter.  

“If you need a warm place to stay, Lakewood is open,” pastor, author and televangelist Joel Osteen said in a Twitter invitation.

“Hundreds arrived last night & more today due to power outages. Staff & volunteers are on site ready to help. We have beds, blankets, a hot meal and supplies for those in need. Stay safe, continue to pray for Texas.”

Bob Smietana is a national reporter for Religion NewBob Smietanas Service.

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6 Responses

  1. TJ,

    Honestly it depends on the size and scope of the organization and also the size of the administrative payroll. If he is working with 4 other people and puts in 80 hour work weeks and brings has a $100 million budget each year is much different than say he has 100 people on staff and puts in only 40 hours a week if that, and has a $10 million budget each year.

  2. I have friends in Texas and I’m checking in with them regularly.
    Sporadic power, and busted pipes are major in their area they told me…but they are resilient and assisting each other.

    1. I live in Austin, Texas and went 60 hours without power and heat until yesterday. Not a lot of fun, to be honest, but even taking a walk up the street yesterday and talking to a couple of neighbors I heard of several acts of charity and kindness including arranging for an elderly neighbor to stay with parents across town where they had power, and a couple of young men delivering badly needed supplies using their four-wheel drive jeep. One of my friends with power ran a extension cord to her mailbox and was thrilled when someone drove by and stopped to use it grind coffee (not exactly an essential, but hey!), and there’s a lot more examples of charitable help given on sites like NextDoor and Reddit

      I was on a Zoom call for a writing group meeting Monday during the outage and a woman I had never met before actually offered to put me up in their self-contained AirBnB apartment since they had power. I declined (I’m sure they found someone more needy than me later), but was very touched by her offer.

      Then there’s Ted Cruz…. perhaps he would have been wiser to spend the week at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center (named after a former Texas senator) setting a good example instead of swanning off to Cancun for some winter sun while millions of his constituents were huddled in the dark, freezing and desperate, and then lying about it when he was caught.

      (Nothing to do with politics, by the way — the Democratic mayor of Austin was pilloried by me and everyone else — including Ted Cruz, ironically — for telling people to stay home during the holiday spike in Covid cases while sitting in a room in a private resort in Cabo san Lucas.)

  3. Thx CM,

    As reported in 2018 on 990 (See link above) – 25 Employees, $2.4M in donations & 40 hour work week.
    I think there’s good money to be made in religious based charitable organizations.
    There appears to be very little transparency or accountability within the Christian Industrial Complex…

  4. THIS is ministry, not getting on a stage spouting off a pretty canned speech about the history of world religions.

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