HOUSING & HOMELESSNESS
Mission: The Ali Forney Center houses and protects homeless LGBT youth living on the streets of New York. Our Street Outreach Team educates teens about safe sex and HIV prevention. We have grown to provide medical and mental health services. We also provide volunteer mentors, educational and career programs, life skills training and much more. Our goal is to not only provide food, water, and shelter: Our goal is to transform the lives of these young people so that they may reclaim their lives and never live on the streets again.
Website: https://www.aliforneycenter.org/get-involved/volunteer-opportunities/
Phone: 212-222-3427
Email: n/a
What volunteers do:
administrative assistance during work week
career/education mentor
tutor
conduct mock interviews (4-month commitment)
drop-in center help (multiple tasks, 3-month commitment)
food service/youth counselor (3-month commitment)
2x/month committees on events/fundraising
FYI:
interview and background check required
Borough: Manhattan
Mission: Project Renewal’s mission is to end the cycle of homelessness by empowering men, women and children to renew their lives with health, homes and jobs. Men and women struggling with homelessness, addiction, mental illness and other chronic health issues need comprehensive services to achieve their goals for independent living. Our range of innovative programs are designed to meet the holistic needs of the most vulnerable homeless men and women. The Bowery Arts Project’s bi-weekly art classes serve a community of men (clients) seeking help with their drug and alcohol addiction. The clients are short-term residents of the non-medical detox floor at Project Renewal's 3rd Street facility.
Website: https://www.projectrenewal.org/get-involved/volunteer/
Email: n/a
Phone: 212-620-0340
What volunteers do:
participate in Project Renewal morning meeting with residents
teach classes (optional)
make art alongside residents
listen to and share time with residents
FYI:
classes Wednesdays and Thursdays 9:15 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
amount of participation flexible
no art-therapy training required
Borough: Manhattan
Mission: BRC recognizes that the effort to end homelessness requires more than passion and experience, but also a sense of organizational responsibility and the strength to manage professionally. BRC is a place of opportunity for the people we serve, sustained and strengthened by their efforts and achievements. We see the potential in each person we meet and welcome them with an individualized plan that leads to personal results. We support our clients with an array of services and programs including street and transit outreach for the unsheltered homeless, substance abuse recovery, reentry from incarceration, health and mental health support, temporary housing and shelter, employment training, permanent housing, and senior support.
Website: https://www.brc.org/volunteer
Email: https://www.brc.org/contact
Phone: Rick Akin 212-803-5720
What volunteers do:
help staff outreach team inform homeless individuals about services and connect them to services (weekly commitment for three months)
assist in food service at residential programs and drop-in centers (food prep and service, cleanup)
administrative assistance (take inventory, file, copy, shred documents, internet research, front-desk reception, data entry); commitment flexible
teach Tai Chi, light yoga, low-impact aerobics to clients
teach ballroom dance
photography/videography
create educational videos for vocational training
create marketing videos
lead creative writing/poetry workshop
English conversation partner with 1-3 seniors, using newspapers and magazines to practice speaking aloud and conversation
assist clients with computers for general use or for job hunting/resume writing
address vocational clients on job-related topics (changing careers in mid-life, challenges in keeping a job, what employers look for, how to resolve work conflicts, how to deal with a difficult boss)
FYI:
registration form and volunteer orientation required
outreach volunteers are Manhattan based and work either 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. or 7 p.m to 9:30 p.m. in teams of three to five
for ballroom dance instructors, Mandarin, Cantonese or Fujan very helpful
computer assistants must understand desktop manipulation, creating and saving documents, cutting and pasting, the Internet and basic Microsoft Office products such as Word and Excel
Mission: BCS works in neighborhoods impacted by systemic poverty. We strengthen communities by fostering the educational success of children, the leadership development of youth, the employment and housing stability of adults, the advancement of individuals living with disabilities, and the empowerment of seniors and families.
Website: https://wearebcs.org/take-action/volunteer/
Volunteer form: https://a107257.socialsolutionsportal.com/apricot-intake/5fe86615-be67-49eb-91e4-e527f28931fa
Email: volunteer@wearebcs.org
Phone: 718-310-5600
What volunteers do:
mentor and tutor youth
maintain community garden
staff events and workshops
provide resume help and financial literacy support
support the operation of mobile shower buses by distributing soap, shampoo, towels (warmer months) and PPE (year-round)
clean the shower bus between clients
Borough: Brooklyn
Mission: CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities works to build grassroots community power across diverse poor and working class Asian immigrant and refugee communities in New York City. We were founded in 1986 by Asian working-class women alarmed by the spike of hate violence on Asian communities and its root causes stemming from institutional racism in the United States. Through our organizing model of base-building, leadership development, campaigns, alliances, and organizational development, we organize Asian communities to fight for institutional change. CAAAV currently has three programs organizing low-income Asian immigrants in Chinatown and Queensbridge Public Housing for racial, gender, and economic justice. Our Chinatown Tenants Union (CTU) builds power of residents to protect affordable housing through: organizing tenants in buildings acquired by predatory landlords to challenge unjust evictions and harassment; activating tenants to become CTU members who lead campaigns to change City and State agencies and policies for greater tenant protections and affordable housing; engaging Chinatown in the Equitable Rezoning Campaign to build a community envisioned by the long-time residents that is sustainable for the long-term.
Website: https://caaav.org/take-action
Volunteer form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc6Cuhbie2dvTfAdQLGHYqf2lv1WZfKaKhNmQ0uNnaKIF9ayg/viewform
Phone: 212-473-6485
Email: justice@caaav.org
What volunteers do:
outreach to rent-stabilized and public-housing tenants
data entry
fundraising committee for special events
interpret/translate in Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, Bangla
Borough: Manhattan, Queens
Mission: We feed the hungry in our soup kitchen and shelter homeless young women & their infants. Since 1971, CHiPS (Park Slope Christian Help, Inc.) has been a community of Brooklyn neighbors, volunteers, and friends who share a common spiritual vision to help those who are less fortunate. We prepare hot, nutritious meals and serve them to the needy in a caring and respectful environment. In addition to meals, we offer seasonal clothing, emergency pantry items, and shelter for young mothers and their children. Our dedication to service goes beyond basic needs in the hope that all our disadvantaged brothers and sisters may find independence and the strength to meet life’s challenges.
Website: https://chipsonline.org/volunteer/
Phone: 718-237-2962
Email: n/a
What volunteers do:
after initial training, work in soup kitchen (food prep, setting tables, packing food for clients to take)
stay overnight in shelter
teach in shelter (life skills, maternal/child health, and budgeting)
support work can be done remotely (advertising, marketing, PR, media, fundraising/grant writing, administrative duties, education)
Borough: Brooklyn
Mission: The Coalition for the Homeless is the nation’s oldest advocacy and direct service organization helping homeless men, women and children. We believe that affordable housing, sufficient food and the chance to work for a living wage are fundamental rights in a civilized society. Since our inception in 1981, the Coalition has worked through litigation, public education and direct services to ensure that these goals are realized.
Website: https://www.coalitionforthehomeless.org/volunteer/
Phone: 212-776-2000
Email: volunteer@cfthomeless.org (for GCP food program or shelter monitor); backtoschool@cfthomeless.org (for backpack drive); toydrive@cfthomeless.org (for toy drive)
What volunteers do:
distribute food, clothing, blankets and other necessities while raising awareness about services provided by Coalition (Grand Central Food Program)
shelter monitors help inspect municipal shelters (evenings and weekends, with training session)
for August backpack drive (backpacks and school supplies), identify drop-off locations, host a drive, help sort, stuff and distribute the bags to homeless students
host holiday toy drives and sort and wrap gifts
Borough: Manhattan office
Mission: Community Voices Heard (CVH) is a member-led multi-racial organization, principally women of color and low-income families in New York State that builds power to secure social, economic and racial justice for all. We accomplish this through grassroots organizing, leadership development, policy changes, and creating new models of direct democracy. The NYC Chapter currently has committees, projects, and/ or hubs focusing on welfare/workforce; public housing; the Rockaways hub (organizing in public housing); participatory budgeting; and East Harlem neighborhood planning.
Website: https://www.cvhaction.org/get-involved
Phone: 212-860-6001
Email: michelle@cvhaction.org
What volunteers do:
distribute fliers
knock on doors
community outreach
participate at CVH events
social media outreach
Borough: Manhattan
Mission: The ESN-NYC membership consists of over 50 faith-based and community shelters. During winter months, the capacity of the network exceeds 400 beds. The Emergency Shelter Network is not a governmental agency. Our network is an alternative to the City-operated shelters for homeless adult individuals. It is the ESN’s belief that the personal attention, intimate setting (member shelters can typically accommodate between 10 and 20 guests), and most importantly respect, give our guests a firm foundation to move out of homelessness, ESN's ultimate goal.
Website: https://emergencyshelternetwork.org/volunteer/
Email: info@emergencyshelternetwork.org
Phone: 646-397-1609
What volunteers do:
set up the shelter room
prepare a meal
stay overnight
Borough: all
Mission: GOLES (Good Old Lower East Side) is a neighborhood housing and preservation organization that has served the Lower East Side of Manhattan since 1977. We’re dedicated to tenants’ rights, homelessness prevention, economic development, and community revitalization. GOLES’ long-term goals are to: build the power of low-income residents on the Lower East Side to address displacement and gentrification; preserve and expand the low-income housing stock; assert community self-determination over the use of public space; and ensure a clean and healthy environment where people live, work, and play.
Website: https://www.goles.org/volunteer
Phone: 212-358-1231
Email: info@goles.org
What volunteers do:
public outreach
prepare for actions
administrative support
Borough: Manhattan
Mission: Habitat for Humanity NYC’s vision is a city - and a world - where everyone has a decent place to live. Habitat for Humanity New York City transforms lives and communities by building quality, affordable homes with families in need, and by uniting New Yorkers around the cause of affordable housing. Founded in 1984 as an independent affiliate of Habitat for Humanity International, Habitat NYC builds in the five boroughs of New York City, building homes for ownership by families and individuals in need. We build the homes with the "sweat equity" of our family partner homeowners who work side-by-side with volunteers. Professional contractors build the exterior shells to code, and the volunteers do the interior construction. In addition to building homes, Habitat NYC is a leading advocate for affordable housing. Our goal is to ensure that every New Yorker has a decent, affordable home, by creating a social movement to end the housing crisis plaguing New York City and by calling on elected officials to make affordable housing a priority.
Website: https://www.habitatnyc.org/volunteer/volunteer-with-habitat-nyc
Email: volunteer@habitatnyc.org
Phone: 212-991-4000, x315
What volunteers do:
haul, dig, measure, cut, pound, raise, demolish or clean (no construction experience necessary)
enhance playgrounds, community centers, public parks and public schools by painting interiors and murals, landscaping and gardening, or performing minor construction tasks
work in ReStore (retail store) in sales, sales, furniture repair, donation procuring, customer service, pricing & visual merchandising, interior design & furniture staging and administrative tasks
administrative opportunities in family services program (phone calls, filing, scanning, returning emails)
administrative opportunities in volunteer services (data entry, phone calls, research)
research for advocacy department
FYI:
optional orientation meeting
Borough: building in all five boroughs; admin work at Manhattan office.
Mission: Housing Works is a healing community of people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS. Our mission is to end the dual crises of homelessness and AIDS through relentless advocacy, the provision of lifesaving services, and entrepreneurial businesses that sustain our efforts. Housing Works fights for funding and legislation to ensure that all people living with HIV/AIDS have access to quality housing, healthcare, HIV prevention information and other life-sustaining services, as well as legal protections from stigma and discrimination. Housing Works is a grassroots organization committed to the use of non-violent civil disobedience in order to further our mission to end AIDS and homelessness. Since 1990, we have provided a comprehensive array of services to more than 20,000 homeless and low-income New Yorkers living with HIV/AIDS. We believe that providing stable housing is healthcare and is the first step toward living a long and healthy life. Supportive services include but are not limited to housing, healthcare, meals and nutritional counseling, mental health and substance use treatment, job training, and legal assistance.
Website: https://www.housingworks.org/volunteer/
Phone: 347-473-7400, x 1
Email: volunteer@housingworks.org or volunteer@housingworksbookstore.org
What volunteers do:
staff bookstore
staff thrift shop
staff fashion and design fundraising events
administrative support (receptionist, assist with events, development, donations)
Borough: Manhattan, Brooklyn
Mission: Lenox Hill Neighborhood House was founded in 1894 by the Alumnae Association of Normal College, now known as Hunter College of the City University of New York. We are among the oldest settlement houses in the nation and created one of the country's first kindergartens, providing educational and social services to indigent immigrants. We have long been a leader in addressing issues including affordable housing, working conditions, health care, hunger, education, poverty, unemployment, homelessness and long-term care for older adults.
Website: https://www.lenoxhill.org/volunteer/
Email: Anthony Snowden, asnowden@lenoxhill.org
Phone: 212-218-0487
What volunteers do:
lead a class or group activity at women’s mental-health shelter (one hour/week, four-month commitment required)
lead educational activities for residents of supportive housing (two hours/week between 9 and 5, M-F, four-month commitment required)
lead 8-week ESOL classes weekdays or evenings
tutor or teach computer skills (Microsoft Office, Photoshop, Instagram) at computer center days, evenings, weekends
Borough: Manhattan
Mission: Little Essentials improves the health, safety and wellbeing of children living in poverty by providing urgently needed resources and parenting education to families in crisis. Little Essentials offers at-risk families living in poverty urgently needed children’s supplies and parenting education to promote the health, wellbeing and safety of their children under five. Through our partners, Little Essentials provides urgently needed items such as warm clothing, car seats and strollers and promotes Safe Sleep by providing cribs, bassinets, and pack & plays. From mothers and children living in domestic violence shelters to homeless families and teen parents raising babies while living in foster care, the families we serve often have nowhere else to turn. Little Essentials is often the difference between a premature baby on oxygen support sleeping on a shelter floor, or in safe and comfortable crib; between a teen mother interviewing only for jobs that her two-year-old child can walk or be carried to, and being able to travel city-wide because she has a stroller.
Website: https://www.littleessentials.org/volunteer
Volunteer signup calendar: https://calendly.com/volunteering-6/volunteer-session-with-little-essentials
Email: info@littleessentials.org
Phone: 646-850-3611
What volunteers do:
sort donations in warehouse
Borough: Brooklyn
Mission: The Metropolitan Council on Housing is a tenants' rights membership organization made up of New York City tenants who believe in our motto of "housing for people, not profit." We formed over 50 years ago to fight for a city where everyone has access to safe, decent, affordable housing. To these ends, we organize tenants to stand up not only for their individual rights, but also for changes to our housing policies. We operate a number of tenant-assistance programs, run by our members, including a tenants' rights telephone hotline and a walk-in clinic, which serve thousands per year and are free and open to any New York City tenant. We publish the city's only monthly newspaper on the tenant movement, and produce a weekly radio show on housing issues.Unlike most nonprofits, our model is mutual aid: tenants helping tenants. We encourage those who receive help from us to become active in our campaigns for housing justice. The integration of member-run services with our organizing reflects our belief that tenants most affected by our housing policies should and will be the driving force behind the changes that will make affordable housing a universal right, not a privilege.
Website: http://metcouncilonhousing.org/about_us/volunteering
Email: Je@metcouncilonhousing.org
Phone: 929-542-7397
What volunteers do:
after training, answer calls during hotline hours and individualized information (not legal advice) on landlord/tenant problems or questions (must be comfortable talking on the phone, have basic computer skills, commit to weekly or biweekly slot of at least 2 hours between 1:30 -5:00 M, W, F, 5:00-8:00, M & W) Spanish a plus, but not required
facilitate a roundtable tenant’s rights clinic (answer questions and give individualized lay information – not legal advice -- on landlord/tenant problems or questions, explain leases, rent histories, and other housing documents); should have knowledge of tenant/landlord law, understand basic legal documents but do not need to be a lawyer or paralegal
phone banks once a month in late afternoon/early evening
mailings second Friday of each month from 10 a.m. to noon
FYI:
training provided
Borough: Manhattan
Mission: The Neighborhood Coalition for Shelter, Inc. (NCS) serves people who are chronically homeless, formerly homeless or at-risk of becoming homeless. Established by religious and community leaders on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, NCS was founded on the premise that homelessness is the responsibility of the entire community. Our goal at NCS is to help people develop the skills they need to live with dignity and independence in safe and stable housing. NCS offers an array of housing and comprehensive services, including counseling, substance abuse treatment, vocational and educational programs, and employment support. In addition, NCS conducts research to inform the development of policies and practices, and enhances public awareness and understanding. NCS also participates in coalitions working with government agencies and policymakers to end homelessness. With its partners in the community, NCS’s dedicated board, staff and volunteers powerfully demonstrate what neighbors can do to reduce, prevent and ultimately end homelessness.
Website: https://www.ncsinc.org/volunteer
Volunteer signup form: https://interland3.donorperfect.net/weblink/WebLink.aspx?id=16&name=E347659
Email: volunteerjobs@ncsinc.org
Phone: 212-537-5100
What volunteers do:
donate, prepare and serve dinner to formerly homeless residents in supportive residenceshost a monthly birthday party and bring or bake cookies, cakes, or your favorite dessert
host Saturday Bingo and High Noon Tea event
lead a recreational activity (yoga, karaoke, drumming, an arts & crafts class, or a comedy show)
rooftop gardening
administration (clerical tasks, research, event logistics)
work from home organizing supply drives
help NCS source donations of basic necessities (laundry detergent, toiletries, and linens)
paint facilities
Borough: Manhattan and Bronx
Mission: Founded in 1990, the New York Legal Assistance Group provides high quality, free civil legal services to low-income New Yorkers who cannot afford attorneys. Our comprehensive range of services includes direct representation, case consultation, advocacy, community education, training, financial counseling, and impact litigation. NYLAG assists victims of domestic violence, immigrants seeking citizenship, elderly New Yorkers in need of public benefits and homecare, children with special needs, tenants at risk of foreclosure and eviction. NYLAG is unique for its ability to serve not only the abject poor, but also individuals and families who earn slightly above the government-designated poverty threshold. We’re able to serve this population because we neither apply for, nor do we receive, Federal Legal Services Corporation (LSC) funding. NYLAG has 125 community offices located in courts, hospitals, and community based organizations in all five boroughs of New York City as well as Westchester, Rockland and Long Island. We also partner with over 600 health and human services agencies across the City to provide cross-referrals and ensure holistic care for New Yorkers in need.
Website: https://nylag.org/volunteers/
Phone: 212-613-5000
Email: volunteer@NYLAG.org
What volunteers do:
retired attorneys, attorneys in transition, law students and law graduates interact directly with clients and provide legal and factual research, litigation preparation, client advocacy, discovery, motion practice under supervision of NYLAG attorneys (commit to working minimum of 2 days or 15 hours per week either at NYLAG’s Manhattan headquarters or at community offices across the five boroughs)
translate and interpret
administration
development
finance
general operations
Mission: The mission of Project Hospitality is to reach out to community members who are hungry, homeless or otherwise in need in order to work with them to achieve their self-sufficiency — thereby enhancing the quality of life for our community. Project Hospitality seeks to realize its mission both by advocating for those in need and by establishing a comprehensive continuum of care that begins with the provision of food, clothing and shelter and extends to other services which include health care, mental health, alcohol and substance abuse treatment, HIV care, education, vocational training, legal assistance, and transitional and permanent housing. This continuum of care includes clinical care and a variety of housing models — emergency, transitional, and permanent supportive — to meet the needs of multiply diagnosed homeless persons. The multidisciplinary and integrated service delivery continuum of HIV support services provides a safety net for many clients with multiple needs in addition to living with AIDS. It provides our clients the support of a larger recovery community, where living with HIV is one factor among other disabilities and life stories.
Website: https://projecthospitality.org/how-you-can-help-volunteer/
Volunteer application: https://projecthospitality.org/volunteer-application/
Email: info@projecthospitality.org
Phone: 718-448-1544
What volunteers do:
assist with meal preparation, service, and clean up in the soup kitchen
take clients shopping in the food pantry
tutor, assist with recreational activities, and take care of children in the homeless family shelter
help with meal and clothing pantry services in homeless Drop-In Center
serve Wednesday evening Positive Living Dinner for Staten Island’s HIV+ community
assist with planning and implementing community and fundraising events
provide clerical help to programs and administrative office
create an activity to conduct (e.g., leading a writing or art group or teaching ESL)
FYI:
volunteer positions are mostly weekdays between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
for soup kitchen, food pantry, and Drop-In Center, minimum commitment of 2 hours per month
for volunteer opportunities in homeless family shelter, 1-1/2 hours minimum commitment one day a week
Borough: Staten Island
Mission: The Right to Counsel NYC Coalition led the campaign to make it a right for tenants to have a lawyer when facing eviction in NYC, inspiring a Right to Counsel movement across the country. We continue to work to stop the eviction crisis in NYC that has threatened our families, our neighborhoods, and our homes for too long.
Website: https://www.righttocounselnyc.org/takeaction
Volunteer signup form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfoHrr2qThd33KIvc0csp50MPumvwjlM3eWINE6DVKkrHYwCg/viewform
Email: info@righttocounselnyc.org
Phone: n/a
What volunteers do:
Court Watch volunteers talk to tenants in the hallways of the housing courts, letting them know their rights
FYI:
Court Watch shifts are 9:30 a.m. to noon on weekdays
Mission: Tenants & Neighbors was founded in 1974 to be the statewide center of power for tenants. Since then, we have successfully preserved thousands of units of affordable housing and strengthened tenants’ rights at the city, state, and federal level. We believe that low and moderate income people should not have to live on the verge of displacement and to have to constantly defend their right to be part of this city. Instead, we believe New York should be a place where people from all walks of life can put down roots and build strong, stable, dynamic communities. Our mission is to build a unified and powerful statewide organization that empowers and educates tenants; preserves affordable housing, livable neighborhoods, and diverse communities; and strengthens tenant protections.
Website: https://www.tandn.org/take-action
Email: Zorina Langdon: zlangdon@tandn.org
Phone: 212-608-4320 x308
What volunteers do:
participate in rallies, demonstrations, and lobbying trips
tenant outreach to build tenant associations and educate tenants on current campaigns
take leadership roles (decide which issues the organization will work on, and execute campaigns)
FYI:
dues-based membership organization; dues are $35/year or $10 for youth and low-income members
Mission: Win is the largest provider of family shelter and supportive housing in New York City. Win transforms the lives of New York City homeless families by providing holistic solutions of safe housing, critical services, and ground-breaking programs they need to succeed on their own so these families can regain their independence and their children can look forward to a brighter future.
Website: https://winnyc.org/volunteer/
Email: info@winnyc.org
Phone: 212-695-4758
Volunteer registration form: https://winnyc.org/volunteer-registration/
What volunteers do:
Headquarters Champions assist Manhattan office staff with filing, data entry, and support with special projects.
Residence Heroes support Win social services staff with general office duties, including answering phones, filing and data entry.
help facilitate pre-planned activities with after-school recreation and Camp Win programs (current activities focus on reading, art, science, and musical theater).
Win-Kind packers work in teams to help sort and categorize in-kind donations (clothing, toiletries and gifts) before sending them directly to Win clients.
Backpack Buddies Drive volunteers help source, fill and distribute backpacks with school supplies for 2,600+ school-aged children.
Holiday Gift Drive volunteers help collect and sort thousands of gifts for the Holiday Gift Program.
event planning
photography
website/media
FYI:
must be 18 to volunteer
after completing volunteer form, you will hear back from WIN within two weeks
30-minute phone orientation required
Backpack Buddies takes place in August; must sign up by the previous June
Holiday Gift Drives take place October-December; signups begin in September
depending on volunteer program, useful skills include Spanish language, facility in Microsoft Office, ability to lift 20 lbs.
Borough: all