Many New Hampshire residents used the state's emergency rental assistance program during the COVID-19 pandemic, which offered hotel or motel rooms to people without a home, but that program is set to end Saturday.
GREENLAND – Pati Frew-Waters, executive director of Seacoast Family Promise, looked around the transitional housing organization for homeless families’ latest housing acquisition and said, it was “just perfect.”
Seacoast Family Promise held a ribbon-cutting for its newest housing unit at 480 Breakfast Hill Road in a former multi-family home previously owned by Bethany Church Friday afternoon. Frew Waters said the home is currently able to house five families who are taking part in Seacoast Family Promise’s programs.
Frew-Waters said the upstairs has an additional kitchen that can be put into use if a family requires isolation due to COVID-19 exposure or it can eventually be converted into additional living space for a sixth family. Currently, there are four families residing in the new facility, she said.