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Phillips, Kurt Steven - Chattanoogan com

Phillips, Kurt Steven Kurt Steven Phillips was born in Los Angeles, Ca. on June 25,1954.  He was a lifelong member of the Crystal Cathedral. He served our country in the US Coast Guard during the Vietnam war. After the Coast Guard, he became an iron worker which took him all over the U.S. and Europe. After Kurt’s injury, he won several medals on the weight lifting and archery teams at the International Paralyzed Veterans Olympics. He would become an instructor for the Iron Workers Apprentice Program, Local 433 in Los Angeles, Ca. He made Daytona Beach his home in 1990. He embraced the Florida lifestyle. He loved to fish, cook, tell stories and laugh, all of which suited him well. His personality entered the room before his wheelchair did. He never met a stranger, and always had time for a joke, no matter how corny. Kurt attended the Daytona Drive-In Christian Church, where he fueled his deep faith In God. He volunteered at a local elementary school and the Daytona Speedway. Eve

This Is Us This Is Eugene

It’s instructive to begin on 7th Avenue and Washington Street in Eugene on any given winter evening. From that starting point, walk the windy asphalt trail through Washington/Jefferson Park. You see them instantly tarps and tents by the layered dozens, each containing stories of homeless men and women who are holding threads of dignity. The tarps and tents are properly spaced (a nod to COVID-19), but they are everywhere under the viaducts of the Washington/Jefferson area, or those areas that the city of Eugene has not walled off. Walk slowly. Absorb it. Then walk north, over a gentle embankment and past more emergency shelters, and you find young basketball players and younger skateboarders testing their skills. Beyond that, you’ll find a collective of social workers handing out hot chili and clothing donations.

Candlight Vigil Honors The Lives Of Unhoused People Who ve Died In 2020

  The Jan. 8 candlelight vigil was the second time the advocacy group Stop Death on the Streets held the event. The group mourned the lives of 30 people who died while experiencing homelessness in 2020. Credit Melorie Begay/KLCC The advocacy group, Stop Death on the Streets held their 2nd annual vigil in Eugene on Friday Jan. 8. About 100 people came to mourn the lives of homeless people who died in the past year.  Activist Chelsea Swift said in a speech during the vigil that the community hasn’t collectively grieved for people who’ve died in 2020, including those who’ve died from COVID-19.

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