Savannah-Chatham Interagency Council on Homelessness: A first of its kind in Georgia
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) — The Interagency Council for Homelessness (ICH) in Savannah-Chatham County is the first of its kind in Georgia.
Governor Brian Kemp signed two bills, House Bill 797 or the 'Homeless Prevention Act of Chatham County' and House Bill 730.
Both recognized and identified the roles of ICH and the Chatham-Savannah Authority for the Homeless (CSAH).
The main goal of these organizations, according to CSAH director Jennifer Dulong, is to coordinate intentional investments into services that can help reduce the number of people on the street. They are doing that through a five-year strategic plan.
'Our goal is care,' Dulong said. 'Our goal is compassion. Ensuring that unhoused neighbors have had every opportunity to connect to critical resources and services is what that five-year strategic plan does. It's measurable, achievable goals.'
According to Dulong, the goal is what's called 'functional zero,' which is rare, brief, or non-existent homelessness.
'We care about street homelessness,' she said. 'We care about people who, for various reasons, are in urban camping situations. Our goal is to help people come off the streets. Our goal is to help people get connected with those critical resources and get into housing again. We will continue to say homelessness as a housing issue and having access to housing is the critical component to ending homelessness.'
Projects like the Dundee Cottages for families and the Cove at Dundee for veterans will soon provide that housing with affordable rates from $400 to $700.
'Our data and demographics suggest that there are more people in our community that don't qualify for permanent supportive housing than do. What we need is affordable housing,' Dulong said. 'Homelessness is a very difficult social issue… it takes a community to address the experience of homelessness, and it takes public-private partnership and very intentional investments in services, housing, supportive services, and care of people.'
CSAH is inviting the community to their annual meeting where they'll present important need-to-know data.
The meeting is being held at the Eckburg Auditorium on Savannah Technical College's campus at 8:30 a.m. on May 21.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Georgia state officials warn demonstrators ahead planned protests
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) — The Georgia Attorney General issued a stern warning to anyone planning to protest this weekend on Wednesday. 'It's very simple,' Attorney General Chris Carr said in part. 'Protesters use words. Rioters use violence. There is no gray area.' Carr said that the statement was 'a warning to rioters.' There are at least 20 demonstrations planned as part of 'No Kings' events around the Peach State on Saturday. 'In Georgia, if you engage in violence for the purpose of changing public policy, you can be charged with Domestic Terrorism,' he said. 'The penalty for Domestic Terrorism is 5-35 years in jail.' Governor Brian Kemp also released a statement on X. 'My office remains in close contact with state and local law enforcement and stands ready to take whatever appropriate action is needed to safeguard our communities from crime and violence while also respecting the constitutional right to peaceful assembly,' Kemp said. 'My support for public safety officers and the rule of law is unwavering, and any violence against those who protect and serve will be met with quick and heavy accountability.' Carr also said that the bottom line is that they will defend the right to peacefully protest, but the state will bring charges against 'those who earn it.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Pentagon diverts $1 billion from barracks improvements to send troops to border
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) – The Pentagon is diverting $1 billion from army barracks upkeep and maintenance funds to send more troops to the Southern border. In their fiscal plan for the rest of 2025, the Pentagon has decided to move over a billion dollars from Facilities, Sustainment, Restoration, and Modernization, a fund that is primarily used for barracks upgrades, to fund President Trump's border mission. The Pentagon has the discretion to move around some funds between accounts as long as that money has already been appropriated by Congress through a process called reprogramming. 'To kind of go back to this old mantra of the military that we have to just suffer the whole time is kind of disappointing and disheartening, especially when we saw some progress moving forward to go away from that,' John Hartman, a veteran who was stationed at Fort Stewart until 2019 and now lives in Savannah said. The Government Accountability Office released a scathing report in 2023 identifying unsafe and unsanitary conditions in barracks around the country. WSAV reported exclusively on some of the poor conditions in the barracks at our own Fort Stewart. 'The desperation and the depression that's caused by the barracks and the housing,' one soldier living in the Fort Stewart barracks at the time said. Now, the Pentagon is diverting $1 billion of the money that was meant to go toward fixing barracks issues. 'Issues with washing machines not working, mold, stuff like that, ACs going out. It's Fort Stewart, that happening in the middle of the summer is brutal, especially when you've been outside all day in the heat working,' Hartman said of the conditions during his time at the installation. Even staunch Trump administration supporter Rep. Buddy Carter (GA-01) has advocated for balance. 'I've been to visit the barracks at Hunter Army Airfield, at Fort Stewart. I will tell you they are in need of repair,' he said. 'Sending money to the southern border is not a bad thing. It's a good thing, but at the same time, we can do both.' Rep. Carter said he's a proponent of replacing the funds with a provision in the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' making its way through Congress. However, that bill has not been passed, and the funding is not guaranteed. 'It doesn't matter whether it comes back or not. There's still going to be backlog. There's still going to be expenses that pile up. At the end of the day, you're just kind of digging a deeper hole,' Hartman said. 'It's a complicated situation, but the answer is not taking such a large amount of funding away from bettering the lives of our service members to push it toward this other issue.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
County estimates nearly $700M in capital projects
CHATHAM COUNTY, Ga. (WSAV) – Chatham County officials estimate nearly $700 million dollars in capital projects, and they are hoping a new round of Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST) funds will help cover the cost. County and city leaders are in the home stretch to make sure SPLOST VIII makes it onto the Nov. 4 ballot. WSAV spoke with commissioner Aaron Whitely about the process. 'Without a special local option sales tax, we would be depending solely on property taxes to fund this,' he said. 'So that's why you'll hear folks such as myself encouraging people to vote for SPLOST because it helps us keep our costs down.: The county has held several town halls about the funding, and he said top priorities he is hearing from the community is affordable housing, roadway repairs and drainage improvements. Several municipalities are also working together to finalize a list of projects they want to prioritize within this budget. 'So as far as some local projects, areas that are going to see that you'll see I think is Quacco Road and Little Neck Road might be somewhere, stormwater drainage, especially on the westside…' Whitely said. He continued, 'but from a county perspective, another one of our big focuses is getting our regional athletic facility done as it will serve as an economic stimulus for that area on the south side, as well as another space that is centrally located for recreation. Whitely also responded to residents who may be skeptical about voting yes in November. 'To my neighbors, you are already currently paying this one penny,' he said. 'All we're asking is to continue it so that we can continue to build our county for the growth that we are experiencing.' Commissioners will hold a workshop on June 18 at 4:30 p.m. to review the project list. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.