One Year of Shelter, Partnership, and Hope

June 23, 2026

Homelessness doesn't always look the way people expect. Many children and families experience "hidden homelessness" — living in motels, doubled up with relatives, or moving from place to place without stability. Because their struggles are less visible, their needs are often overlooked.

 

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9QaBzm_Lc0

 

Before A Way Home opened its doors, there was no family shelter within 50 miles of Spartanburg. Families in crisis had nowhere local to turn, despite significant need across Spartanburg County:

  • Approximately 3,000 people experience homelessness on any given night.
  • An estimated 1,200–1,500 children experience homelessness in the county each year.
  • 84% of single-mother households live below the ALICE Threshold.

 

For children, housing instability means disrupted schooling, lost friendships, health challenges, and an erosion of the sense of safety every child deserves. A Way Home exists to address this need.


Our Approach


Three years ago, Spartanburg County had lost both of its family shelters. When community leaders presented a countywide plan to address housing and homelessness through A Place to Call Home, local congregations stepped forward to bring family shelter back.


Today, 22 congregations maintain a rotational shelter that opens its doors to families each week. At night, families sleep, shower, and share meals in welcoming church spaces. During the day, they spend time at the Day Center, where they have access to laundry, case management, job resources, and transportation — and simply a place to be families and kids. Every Sunday, they move to a new host congregation, creating a network of care that extends far beyond any single building.


A Place to Call Home staff provides individualized case management, helping families navigate housing applications, employment, benefits, and childcare. Participants meet weekly with their case manager to work toward their goals and stability. The program runs up to 90 days, with extensions based on progress. The goal is always permanent housing and long-term stability.Over the past year, one of our neighbors, who we will call James, moved into permanent housing after more than 20 years of living on the streets in downtown Spartanburg. He has now been stably housed since Thanksgiving.


One Year of Impact


70 families resourced by A Way Home case managers

18 families sheltered with no other housing option

10 families in permanent, sustainable housing

500+ volunteers contributing over $360,000 in in-kind hours   

 

What those numbers look like in practice:

“You reminded us that love is still alive and community still matters. You reminded us that faith is not only expressed through words but through action, patience and compassion. You showed us the heart of Christ in everything you did.”

Those words came from a family who wrote to their host congregation after leaving the program — a reminder that the generosity of our partner churches leaves a lasting mark.


One family arrived at A Way Home with nothing but the clothes on their backs. On their first night, they were welcomed by volunteers at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Spartanburg. Weeks later, when the rotation brought them back to the same congregation, the children ran ahead to greet the volunteers who had first made them feel safe. For those kids, it wasn’t just a shelter. It was a place where they were known and felt safe.


The Partnership That Makes It Work

A Way Home is not one organization doing this work alone. It is a collaboration.

A Place to Call Home

A Place to Call Home provides the professional backbone of the program. APTCH staff conduct family intakes, provide ongoing case management, and staff the Day Center Monday through Friday. They coordinate transportation, connect families to resources, and serve as the consistent thread of support throughout each family's stay.

The Faith Initiative to End Child Poverty

The Faith Initiative to End Child Poverty mobilizes Spartanburg's faith community to respond to child and family homelessness. The Faith Initiative recruits and coordinates partner churches, manages Sunday Day Center volunteers, and ensures that each week of hosting is covered and supported.

 

Host Churches

Host churches are the heartbeat of A Way Home. Each week, a congregation opens its space, preparing rooms, serving meals morning and evening, and providing overnight volunteers who ensure families are safe throughout the night. Hosting is a significant commitment, and the churches that step into this role do so with extraordinary generosity.


Support Churches

Support churches strengthen the work by providing additional volunteers, helping with meal preparation, and offering practical assistance to host congregations. This model means that churches of any size can participate in a meaningful way, because the entire network is stronger together.

 

Every church in this network, whether hosting families for a full week or simply showing up to help serve a meal, is an essential part of why A Way Home works.

 

A Way Home Churches:

 

Bethel United Methodist Church

Central United Methodist Church

Church of the Nazarene

Crossroads Baptist Church

Fernwood Baptist Church

First Presbyterian Church

Grace Presbyterian Church

Hub City Church

Jesus Our Risen Savior   

New Beginnings United Methodist Church

Second Presbyterian Church

Silver Hill United Methodist Church

St. James United Methodist Church

St. John's Lutheran Church

St. Margaret's Episcopal Church

St. Matthew's Episcopal Church

St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church

St. Paul United Methodist Church

Trinity United Methodist Church 

Unitarian Universalist Church of Spartanburg

Westminster Presbyterian Church

 

Get Involved

A Way Home runs because people choose to show up. Here are some ways you or your congregation can be part of this work:

 

Volunteer at the Day Center

Shifts are available on Sunday from 7 AM to 4:45 PM (broken into 3-hour slots) and on weekday afternoons. No special skills required, just a willingness to be present. A Way Home | A Place to Call Home | Spartanburg, SC

 

Host or Support Families

Congregations of any size can participate, whether by hosting families for a week or supporting a host church with meals and volunteers. Reach out to Sally Dyer at sbdyer@gmail.com to learn more about what's involved.

 

Give

Every contribution directly supports shelter, case management, and the resources families need to move toward permanent housing.

  • Give online at ignite.stratuslive.com, or make a check out to United Way of the Piedmont with "APTCH – A Way Home" in the memo, mailed to P.O. Box 7300, Spartanburg, SC 29304.
  • Donate in-kind items: twin-sized blankets, pillows, household cleaning supplies, and laundry detergent are always needed. Shop directly from the Amazon Wish List.

 

To learn more or get connected, contact:

·      Deandra Comer, APTCH's Shelter and Housing Programs Manager, at dcomer@aptchspartanburg.org

·      Sally Dyer, Faith Initiative A Way Home Project Leader, at sbdyer@gmail.com

 

Thank You

A Way Home exists because of people who believe that every family deserves a safe place to land and who are willing to do the work of making that real. To our 500+ volunteers who contributed over $360,000 in in-kind volunteer hours: thank you. This impact belongs to all of you.

 


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