In August, TheBlaze told you
about the battle unfolding in LaFayette, Georgia, between a high school
football coach and the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF), an
atheist-activist non-profit. As we originally reported, the
organization is taking the coach to task,
claiming that he violated the First Amendment by allowing local
churches to prepare meals for team members. Now — the local community is
coming to his defense, using prayer as a tool to defeat the group.
The FFRF claimed in an initial letter that was sent to the school
that Ridgeland High School coach Mark Mariakis prayed with the football
players, used Bible verses in motivational speeches and on team shirts
and took part on the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, a faith-based
organization.
The group also said that a minister typically delivers
Christian-themed remarks to the players — another violation that has the
activists fired up. The FFRF and its supporters want these practices to
be ceased. But, believers and supporters of Mariakis aren‘t taking the
group’s demands lightly.
READ MORE
Monday, September 10, 2012
Prager University: Do High Taxes Raise More Money?
Number of children in city's homeless shelters hits 19,000. Teen Francheska Luciano said living in shelter is like a living hell
Sometimes life in a homeless shelter is more than a 14-year-old can handle.
Francheska Luciano, who is among a growing number of homeless children in the city, said living in a shelter was “like living in hell.”
“I’m tired of this,” she said Friday while sitting on a curb outside a shelter intake center in the Bronx with her mother and little sisters. “It’s a nightmare every day.”
The number of children in the city’s shelters hit 19,000 last week, the most recent city data available show.
“Not since the grim days of the Great Depression has New York City had 20,000 children sleeping homeless each night,” said Patrick Markee, senior policy analyst with the Coalition for the Homeless.
Francheska’s family was waiting outside a Department of Homeless Services intake center surrounded by suitcases containing all their belongings.
“It’s really hard on my sisters; they’re young, they have no childhood, they don’t sleep well. It’s not fair to them,” Francheska said of Shanely, 7, Yadeiliz, 4, and Mileishka, 2.
The family has been staying at New Hope Shelter in the Bronx since January after being evicted from an apartment they paid for with a city rental subsidy called Advantage. The city axed the program, citing funding cuts.
The Lucianos went to the center to get transferred to a shelter in Brooklyn, closer to the younger kids’ daycare and in a safer neighborhood.
“The area where we are staying now is really bad. I can’t go outside because it’s so dangerous,” Francheska said.
In past year, shelter population has risen by 17% and the number of children has risen by 18%, city stats show
Francheska Luciano, who is among a growing number of homeless children in the city, said living in a shelter was “like living in hell.”
“I’m tired of this,” she said Friday while sitting on a curb outside a shelter intake center in the Bronx with her mother and little sisters. “It’s a nightmare every day.”
The number of children in the city’s shelters hit 19,000 last week, the most recent city data available show.
“Not since the grim days of the Great Depression has New York City had 20,000 children sleeping homeless each night,” said Patrick Markee, senior policy analyst with the Coalition for the Homeless.
Francheska’s family was waiting outside a Department of Homeless Services intake center surrounded by suitcases containing all their belongings.
“It’s really hard on my sisters; they’re young, they have no childhood, they don’t sleep well. It’s not fair to them,” Francheska said of Shanely, 7, Yadeiliz, 4, and Mileishka, 2.
The family has been staying at New Hope Shelter in the Bronx since January after being evicted from an apartment they paid for with a city rental subsidy called Advantage. The city axed the program, citing funding cuts.
The Lucianos went to the center to get transferred to a shelter in Brooklyn, closer to the younger kids’ daycare and in a safer neighborhood.
“The area where we are staying now is really bad. I can’t go outside because it’s so dangerous,” Francheska said.
Thousands of striking teachers flood the Loop for rally
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