Community Impact’s Emergency Services Programs

The George Blumenthal professor of political economy and a professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University, Sharyn O’Halloran teaches various undergraduate, graduate, and professional courses. In addition to teaching, Sharyn O’Halloran serves on the Board of Directors of Community Impact at Columbia University.

Committed to helping individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds, Community Impact maintains several programs with the assistance of students, faculty, and staff at Columbia University. Four of the organization’s programs, which are discussed below, focus on emergency services:

Community Lunch. Located at the Broadway Presbyterian Church, Community Lunch provides home-cooked meals for up to 100 individuals with low-income backgrounds. Food is served family-style, and volunteers often organize holiday parties and fundraising events.

Project for the Homeless. Responsible for maintaining two homeless shelters, Project for the Homeless consists of students from Barnard College and Columbia University. Student volunteers work as nightly supervisors at the shelters and ensure that they stay open for 120 nights.

SHOUT. Dedicated to providing families and individuals without a home with fresh food and dry goods, SHOUT volunteers and coordinators run a weekly food pantry at Ford Hall. Open on Mondays and Thursdays, the pantry provides clients with warm clothes.

Habitat for Humanity. Volunteers with the organization’s Habitat for Humanity branch work once or twice a month to renovate and construct affordable housing. The program has previously helped restore homes damaged by Hurricane Sandy and is currently exploring youth initiatives.

Community Impact Offers Student Health Outreach

A longtime political science researcher at Columbia University in New York City, Sharyn O’Halloran currently serves as the George Blumenthal Professor of Political Economy and Professor of International and Public Affairs. Sharyn O’Halloran also belongs to the board of directors of Community Impact, a nonprofit organization dedicated to serving disadvantaged populations in the Morningside Heights, Washington Heights, and Harlem communities. As part of its work with local residents, Community Impact sponsors a number of health and wellness programs, including the Student Health Outreach Program (SHOUT).

Participants in the SHOUT program work closely with families to educate them about government benefits and health insurance opportunities. Together with the nonprofits Children’s Defense Fund and SeedCo, the SHOUT program provides outreach with the help of a number of community organizations. Two days per week, the SHOUT program manages a food pantry and distributes fresh produce to members of the community.

To learn more about the SHOUT program at Community Impact, visit the official website at communityimpact.columbia.edu.