Community Spotlight: Hour Children

Community Spotlight: Hour Children

Continuing our Watch & Listen initiative, Extra Butter's commitment to using its platform to shed light on social topics that require dialogue and action, here is a local organization in our new neighborhood of Long Island City that we feel deserves attention. Hour Children is a nonprofit organization serving formerly and currently incarcerated women and their children.

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Thanks to everyone who contributed to the Extra Butter for Hour Children. Your donations go towards workshops and mentorship to at-risk teens in our local community. Our long term vision is to commit deeper change in the systemic cycle that affects families incarcerated for minor crimes.

While we will continue to have initiatives locally to support Hour Children, you can support digitally via GoFundMe. Our immediate goal is $20k, but we have long term plans to raise larger funds to help renovate their kids center. Any contribution helps!

 

 

In 1986, Sister Teresa “Tesa" Fitzgerald developed a home for children whose mothers were in prison. Recognizing the struggles of these women to get back on their feet, Sister Tesa helps incarcerated and formerly incarcerated women and their children successfully rejoin the community, reunify with their families, and build healthy, independent, and secure lives. In 1992, Hour Children was officially started to carry on that mission.


The name was inspired by the key hours that impact the life of a child with an imprisoned mother: the hour of her arrest, the hour of their prison visit, and the hour she finally arrives home.

Key Hour Children Initiatives:
  • Prisoner Advocacy
  • Supportive Housing
  • Job Skill Training & Job Placement
  • Mental Health & Financial Counseling
  • After School & Summer Programs
  • Teen Mentorship
  • Thrift Stores
  • Community Pantry

 

Teresa and her team work endlessly to provide education and advocacy for women still in prison, along with transportation and other resources for children to facilitate visitation. An overlooked challenge is how pregnant women in the prison system tend to their new born baby. Hour Children operates the Nursery inside Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, where mothers can live with their infants for up to 18 months, providing infants born during their mother’s incarceration with critical bonding time with their mother. During the day, while mothers are attending school, mandated programs, or working, the infants are cared for in the Child Development Center, which is staffed by Hour Children employees and women who are incarcerated at the facility.

 

The organization works to help women use their time in prison constructively to improve themselves as parents and as individuals, including parenting education classes, where women explore topics that impact their role as mothers. Once they are back home, Hour Children continues to support by providing for transitional and permanent housing, a community food pantry, and job skill training.


Hour Children also creates a healthy, socially well-adjusted, and academically nurturing environment for kids with extracurricular activities, after-school programs, tutoring, and summer camps.

 

 

     

    Stay tuned to our social for news on how you can contribute to this cause in the near future.

     

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