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New Frontier Chronicle January/February 2023 | Vol. 41, No. 1

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TELLING THE SALVATION ARMY STORY FOR 40 YEARS • 1983–2023

NEWS FROM THE SALVATION ARMY USA WEST • JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2023 • VOL. 41, NO. 1

Captain Lisa Barnes

SEEDS of Hope voted best in 'Survivor Care' for anti-human trafficking

L-r: Michele Prosser, Lt. Colonel Lee Lescano, Peter Armstrong from Wakeland Housing, Ernest and Evelyn Rady, Bernie Porter and Megan Dowell

$100M Rady Project to expand efforts in San Diego

|PHOTO COURTESY SALVATION ARMY SAN DIEGO

Project to broaden housing options, continuum of care BY KRISTIN MARGUERITE DOIDGE

The Salvation Army in San Diego has a vision to expand its efforts to reach more community members in need through the $100 million Rady Center development project at the Centre City facility in downtown San Diego. The nearly 200,000 square foot state-of-the-art facility will in-

crease critical community services The Salvation Army already provides, such as food assistance and meals for seniors, and will more than triple shelter and support services to help get men and women off the streets and on a path to successful independent living or into permanent supportive housing. It will replace the current Centre City Corps. The new Rady Center is made possible by a generous donation

Program continues to change lives in Las Vegas through trauma-informed care.

from philanthropists Ernest and Evelyn Rady and a first-of-its-kind, long-term innovative partnership with local nonprofit Wakeland Housing and Development Corporation. The news comes at a time when the number of people experiencing homelessness has increased more than 10 percent in San Diego, according to the latest point-in-time count released by the San Diego

BY LOU BUHL

Out of 10 nominees, the International Anti-Slavery Commission voted The Salvation Army Southern Nevada as best in “Survivor Care” at an awards gala Oct. 29. The award recognized The Salvation Army SEEDS of Hope program for providing shelter, re-homing services, repatriation and other means of assistance in anti-human trafficking services. “I believe we really do offer the best survivor care here in the Valley,” said

RADY CENTER PAGE 10

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PERMIT NO. 1831 LOS ANGELES, CA

NON PROFIT US POSTAGE

SEEDS OF HOPE PAGE 10

New Mexico EDS response forges new connections When a New Mexico pueblo was without water for weeks, The Salvation Army stepped in.

30840 Hawthorne Blvd., Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90275

The Salvation Army

BY HILLARY JACKSON

Santa Fe (New Mexico) Corps Officer Lt. Ismael Gutierrez got a call in early November. On the other end, a man from the government said a nearby Native American settlement, Pueblo of Acoma, had been out of water for a week after its wells had failed, and that they were in desperate need of food. He asked if The Salvation Army could provide food boxes for seniors there for a week. Gutierrez said “yes.” “We didn't have any food in our pantry, so we ended up going to Sam's Club with some of our congregation members and volunteers and we did a shopping spree there,” he said. “We had some volunteers here assembling boxes, and we delivered it to Acoma.”

INSIDE ONCE & FOR ALL General Brian Peddle shares a message for 2023.

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LOSS AND RECOVERY How The Salvation Army helped one man find hope.

Lt. Ismael Gutierrez helps a volunteer pack food boxes. |PHOTO COURTESY SOUTHWEST DIVISION

The water outage at Pueblo of Acoma stretched on, and the food box delivery proved to be the start of The Salvation Army’s efforts to meet human needs there. In the days following the delivery,

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CHAMPIONS IN LIFE Red Shield boxing coach helps kids succeed in and out of the ring.

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Gutierrez got a call from a state representative, thanking him for the food and asking if The Salvation Army could feed the 270 kids of the pueblo for 28 days because they couldn’t go to school due to the unsanitary water conditions—they had switched to virtual learning. Gutierrez reached out to Southwest Director of Emergency/Disaster Services Nicole Kanne, who said she talked with Midwest Food Bank in Phoenix, and they sent a truckload of 30 pallets of food and drinks in addition to a truckload of bottled water. After responding for 28 days, Kanne said The Salvation Army had supplied 8,695 meals for the kids and seniors of the community in addition to providing 28,128 bottles of water. Pueblo of Acoma is located on a high bluff, and is considered to be the oldest continuously inhabited community in the

NEW FRONTIER AT 40 Western territorial newspaper hits milestone in 2023.

NEW MEXICO PAGE 11

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Promoted to Glory .....12 Around the West ........13 Around the World ..... 14


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New Frontier Chronicle January/February 2023 | Vol. 41, No. 1 by Caring Magazine, a publication from The Salvation Army - Issuu