DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

A historic church pushes plans to help unhoused veterans

January 12, 2026
in News
A historic church pushes plans to help unhoused veterans

Washington’s historic Metropolitan AME Church is considering an ambitious plan to help unhoused military veterans in D.C. by constructing a multilevel building with up to 27 “micro-unit” apartments behind the landmark sanctuary on M Street NW.

In addition to creating studio apartment units, the proposed site would offer wraparound services, such as mental health care, to aid veterans in need, church leaders say.

“We want those who have served to be able to live with dignity in the city,” said Pastor William H. Lamar IV. “This is where our faith is both incarnate and operationalized. It’s our turn to repay in this kind of commitment.”

Church officials acknowledge that the plan is still very much a concept and is likely three to five years from completion. Questions of costs, funding streams and even feasibility remain unanswered at this moment.

But Lamar and church leaders said they will persist because the project aligns with their church’s foundational principles to put their faith into action. The focus on veterans also follows the traditions of their forebears from past generations at the church.

From the mid-19th century, the congregation served as a beacon for Black worshipers and those in need, including harboring the formerly enslaved as a stop along the Underground Railroad. Just after the Civil War and through two World Wars, those coming home from military often found fellowship in the church’s Methodist mandate toward acts of service.

Lamar said the project could be a lifeline for unhoused veterans, and help the issue of homelessness downtown, where there is a sizable veteran population.

Gladys Vaughn, who heads the church’s nonprofit development corporation, said she hopes the project could become a new model for how churches in urban settings can make an impact in their neighborhoods.

“Churches can actually attend to the issues that are literally right around them,” Vaughn said. “The veterans are literally right around Metropolitan. You can’t perpetually go into the church, enjoy your service and leave the issues for someone else to do.”

Charles Breece, vice chair and treasurer of the church’s nonprofit development corporation and project lead for the proposal, said the church still needs to answer several questions to determine the project’s feasibility. The building would need to fit a narrow 17 x 88 foot parcel of land behind the church. They also need to identify a developer and navigate zoning and historic preservation requirements.

“Is it feasible? Is it constructable? Can it be constructed without damaging the church? Is it financially and economically viable?” Breece said.

Lamar acknowledges that the project likely will need a blend of fundraising, grants and investment by government and the commercial sectors at a time when budgets are being slashed, but said they will be committed to finding a way.

“We are undaunted,” Lamar said. “Now is the time to overinvest in these population, particularly for those who serve.”

The post A historic church pushes plans to help unhoused veterans appeared first on Washington Post.

A kidnapped brute finds the tables turned in ‘Heel’
News

A kidnapped brute finds the tables turned in ‘Heel’

by Los Angeles Times
March 7, 2026

The movie is called “Heel” and its frenetic opening — a flash-cut glimpse of young, handsome, swaggeringly cruel Tommy (Anson ...

Read more
News

Cal State Bakersfield basketball coach faces charges of pimping and possession of drugs and firearms

March 7, 2026
News

DOJ ‘caught red-handed’ hiding Trump sex abuse allegations: lawmaker

March 7, 2026
News

Exodus at the Kennedy Center as National Symphony director flees Trump’s chaotic takeover

March 7, 2026
News

U.S. Gas Prices Jump Again as Oil Tops $90 for First Time in Years

March 7, 2026
Russia Gets Silent Treatment in Paralympics Return

Russia Gets Silent Treatment in Paralympics Return

March 7, 2026
Galaxy’s Jamaican opponent in Champions Cup may be short 10 players because of visa woes

Galaxy’s Jamaican opponent in Champions Cup may be short 10 players because of visa woes

March 7, 2026
Kristi Noem Survived Many Crises. Then She Crossed a Trump Red Line.

Kristi Noem Survived Many Crises. Then She Crossed a Trump Red Line.

March 7, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026