Around the island: 10 years of giving

Published on November 08, 2022

Midway Christmas Morning 4.JPEG

The weather has helped us fly into fall, and the winter holidays and season of giving are around the corner. Starting with Diwali and Thanksgiving and leading into Hanukkah, Christmas, the Winter Solstice, Kwanzaa, and Chinese New Year, it’s a magical season for all.  

Ten years ago, Alameda resident Merideth Mehlberg created a holiday family tradition of making someone else’s life a little better. In 2013, the first Alameda Jammie Drive launched with Merideth collecting gifts of jammies and slippers from friends and family for the women and children at Alameda’s Midway Shelter.

Midway Shelter helps women and children suffering from homelessness and domestic violence. The shelter opened in 1989 and they chose the name Midway to identify the turnaround point in the lives of women and children where the cycle of homelessness and domestic violence is broken and replaced with a planned recovery process. 

As we enter the 10th year of the Jammie Drive, the need is greater than ever. Earlier this year, dozens of volunteers and City and County workers covered the island and identified 264 individuals in Alameda who are homeless, 180 living unsheltered in a tent, car, RV, or on the street, and 84 living in emergency shelters and transitional housing. That’s an increase of 30% since 2017, and the Alameda Unified School District reports that 69 of their students, kids in Alameda schools, are currently homeless.

Building Futures for Women and Children is the nonprofit organization that manages our local shelters. Over the years, the Jammie Drive expanded to not only support the women and children at Midway Shelter, but also families at a local Safe House, a women and children’s shelter in San Leandro, and families who are moving out of these emergency shelters and into permanent housing of their own.

This year, Building Futures identified 80 families that need our support. Here are 3 easy ways to make someone’s life a little better:

  1. Sign up to adopt a family: alamedaca.gov/jammiedrive. When you do, you’ll choose who you are buying jammies for. Moms need jammies or sweatshirts and pants. Kids need jammies and socks. Everyone can use other cozy clothing if that is an option!
  2. Purchase your jammies: If you shop local, you can drop off your jammies at one of two outdoor drop-off stations where we will give you a small gift in return, a collectible token and City of Alameda keychain celebrating the Jammie Drive’s 10th year. If you shop online or can’t make it to the drop-off stations, mail your jammies directly to Building Futures (find drop-off station locations and mailing address at the end of the article).
  3. Support families moving from emergency housing to permanent housing with a move-in kit: campaigns.givedirect.org/jammiedrive2022. Celebrating the Jammie Drive’s 10th year, our goal is to raise $10,000 to help families who need it the most. If your employer will match your donation, your contribution will have double the impact! 

Housing ends homelessness, and as families move from emergency housing into permanent housing, they often have little to no belongings. These move-in kits include the basics like bedding, cleaning supplies, a microwave, kitchen supplies, bath towels, and gift cards for groceries.

The holidays are a reminder to appreciate everything that we have, even when times are tough, including our small community and the big world around us. A giant thank you to Merideth and Kevin Mehlberg, all of the volunteers over 10 years who were a key part of the Jammie Drive’s continued success, and the 844 Alamedans who donated. This one effort has delivered cozy new jammies to 1,410 women and children and raised $40,000! Jammies keep people warm, and being able to give new cozy jammies and a fresh start to people in need makes us all feel warm.

JAMMIE DRIVE LINKS

JAMMIE DRIVE DROP-OFF LOCATIONS (include the family number, ex: B12, and mother's name, ex: Emma, on bags)

  • Drop-Off Station 1: Saturday, December 3, 10 am-12 pm, Jean Sweeney Park
  • Drop-Off Station 2: Wednesday, December 8, 4-6 pm, City Hall
  • Drop-off, mail to, or ship online orders now through December 15: Building Futures, c/o Jammie Drive, 1840 Fairway Dr, San Leandro, CA 94577

RESOURCES

  • Alameda Homeless Hotline: call 510–522-HOME (4663), or 211 on evenings and weekends
  • If you see someone who may be having a mental health crisis: call 911 or 510-337-8340 and explain the situation
  • 24-hour domestic violence hotline: 1-866-A WAY OUT (292-9688) 

This article was written for the Alameda Journal by Sarah Henry, a public information officer for the city of Alameda. She can be reached at 510-747-4714 or shenry@alamedaca.gov.

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