An Overview

Since 2005, HEAR US offers award-winning resources and information for those concerned about children, teens and families experiencing homelessness.

HEAR US gives voice and visibility to children, youth and families experiencing homelessness.
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MONTH EVENT DETAILS ABOUT DIANE/HEAR US
JULY  

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Diane's Bio

Diane's blog: //medium.com/@dianehearus

Diane's Facebook Page

Diane's books: 
Crossing the Line: Taking Steps to End Homelessness

Changing the Paradigm of Homelessness

Dismazed and Driven - My Look at Family Homelessness in America

The 3 Melissas - The Practical Guide to Surviving Family Homelessness (co-author Diana Bowman) 

Diane's Awards:

  • 2024, NC Coalition to End Homelessness Be a Light
  • 2023, DuPage PADS Wake Up Your Spirit award
  • 2022, Honorary membership, ODK, SUNY, Oneonta
  • 2015, NAEHCY, Best Targeted Campaign, Worn Out Welcome Mat - KS
  • 2015, Sisters of St. Francis, Joliet, IL, Mother Alfred Moes Award
  • 2014, University of St. Francis, Joliet, IL Sister Clare Award
  • 2013, Texas Homeless Network, Kathy Reid Award
  • 2012, National Association for Education of Homeless Children Youth, Sandra Neese Lifetime Achievement Award
  • 2012, The Education Center, Naperville, Kids’ Best Friend Award
  • 2012, Georgia Alliance to End Homelessness, Community Builder Award
  • 2012, Bridge Communities, Transforming Lives Award (YouTube video of her acceptance speech)
  • 2008, Naperville Church Women United, Human Rights Award
  • 2007, NAEHCY, Outstanding Media Award
  • 2006, Kane County (IL) Hidden Hero; and University of St. Francis Award of Merit
AUGUST

8/15, Hospitality House, Boone, NC  
20th Anniversary Luncheon 

SEPTEMBER

9/30, RESA, Wayne County, MI
In Class Is Where It's At: Building Good Attendance Conference

OCTOBER  
NOVEMBER

 3, WAITT, Grace UMC, Naperville 1:30

5-6, Kankakee McKinney-Vento Summit

DECEMBER  
JANUARY '26  
FEBRUARY  
MARCH  
APRIL  
MAY  
JUNE  
   

Our book is now available!

ORDER SINGLE COPIES..... IngramSpark $15 +s/h,
Amazon, or other popular book vendors

Available for BULK Order! CONTACT DIANE

 

Articles and 3Melissas book reviews

Book Review (New Pages Blog, 9/18/24)

 Article (NC Newsline, 9/26/24)

 Article (Ms. Magazine, 10/20/24)

Article, (The Progressive Magazine, 11/7/24)

 

1 3M THEcover copy


The Three Melissas--  
THE Practical Guide to Surviving 
Family Homelessness

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The book that needed to be written, filled with wisdom and observations from 3 astute women named Melissa with loads of lived homelessness experience!

Target audience: families experiencing homelessness.

Family homelessness demands so much from parents and kids. It's a time of trauma and uncertainty. No one guides you through the process. Until now. 

Families will find practical helpful hints to make these hard times a bit easier.  Those who work with families will learn directly from experts, The Three Melissas. Those curious about family homelessness will be astounded at what families navigate.

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MelissaA

Melissa A
Illinois

MelN bw

Melissa N

Florida

MelT BW

Melissa T

Kansas

The Three Melissas jumped at the chance to collaborate on this project, the first handbook on family homelessness, and the most important book for parents and those helping parents deal with homelessness.

The book is based on their input, shared with Diana and Diane who shaped it into this eye-opening handbook.  

The Three Melissas will receive proceeds from the book

Watch these 1-minute film clips featuring
these incredible women!

Melissa A

Melissa N

Melissa T

Watch this 5-min. video of
The Three Melissas
3M logo onBlk
The Three Melissas now have a Substack page
where posts, videos, pics and more will be shared as time goes on.
No subscription fee, just sign up and join our social media efforts! 

About the book...

The Three Melissas -
The Practical Guide to Surviving Family Homelessness
ISBN 9798988181682 - Available (Sept. 2024) - ORDER Through IngramSpark 
Amazon or where quality books are sold. 

By Diana Bowman and Diane Nilan,
In Collaboration with Melissa A (IL), Melissa N (FL), Melissa T (KS)

Summary:

Who knows more about family homelessness than the parents who experience it? The Three  Melissas -- The Practical Guide to Surviving Family Homelessness is a unique book of wisdom from 3 mothers named Melissa filled with their unfettered advice to millions of other moms, dads, and caregivers without a place to live. 

These hard-won observations and suggestions, compiled into an unprecedented survival guide for families experiencing homelessness in the United States each year, offers tips and takes on common issues bedeviling stressed parents. This guide will also inform those working with homeless families, giving readers a more enlightened understanding of the mostly invisible and growing crisis of family homelessness. 

Authors/editors:

Diana Bowman and Diane Nilan, two long-time advocates and professionals have spent collectively over 75 years learning about family homelessness in the U.S. From their respective positions, they’ve provided abundant invaluable information and assistance to communities, educators, service providers, and policy makers. At the heart of their efforts has always been the commitment to convey the combined challenges of being homeless and raising children, and to provide tips to help families survive their hardships.

This book project took their mission to another level, requiring help from the experts, namely parents with lived experience of homelessness. Featured in this book are three mothers, all named Melissa, who offered poignant insights into what it’s like to be homeless with small children. They also provided scores of practical tips and words of encouragement to support and inspire other parents facing homeless.

Purpose:

The practical advice from the 3 Melissas will not only provide support and encouragement to parents experiencing homelessness but will reduce anxiety and ease tensions between families and those trying to help them. Those inviting families to temporarily stay with them, doubling up, will learn ways to smooth this often-bumpy arrangement. Educators, agency professionals and policymakers will gain insights about everyday logistical challenges families encounter and turn those insights into ways to alleviate family homelessness. 

Distribution:

Marketing plans are in process to get the book into the hands of as many families as possible. HEAR US will sell this book through mainstream book vendors. Proceeds from the book will be distributed to The Three Melissas. Charles Bruce Foundation, publisher. Paperback (5x7), appx. 150 pages. Retail $15. Bulk prices available.  Available September 2024. BULK ORDERS NOW ACCEPTED!
More info, contact Diane Nilan.

 

 

 

 

Each family HEAR US has interviewed across the country has expressed the same desperate lament—we want to find a place to live! Their various forms of homelessness have rendered them invisible to all except the school district’s homeless liaison. HEAR US Inc., the one-woman national nonprofit organization giving voice and visibility to families and youth experiencing homelessness, aims to empower families to be heard in their local community via the New Day Dawning - Mamas and Mayors initiative. 

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Kids and parents struggle to survive in communities large and small; rural, urban, and suburban. Mostly invisible, they double up, stay in motels, sleep in vehicles, tough it out in abandoned buildings, and worse. What they have in common — they’re not identified in HUD’s homeless count so their existence goes unnoticed, and their plight unaddressed

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The pandemic worsened things, but family homelessness is not a new issue; few pay attention. Powerless parents, focused on survival, and petrified about child welfare authorities stepping in to take their kids, maintain a low profile. Thus, they are typically not the “squeaky wheel that gets the grease.” That can change with launching of the HEAR US New Day DawningMamas and Mayors project. 

Of elected officials across the land, mayors are the most common and accessible. It’s their job to be concerned about their local residents. They also have the ears of elected officials—county, state and federal representatives. Chances are, mayors are clueless about the extent of family homelessness in their communities. That’s where the mamas come in….

Ayden morning copyIf just a handful of courageous mamas sit down and talk to their mayors, explaining the circumstances and challenges of their families’ situations, and ask the mayors for help—immediate and systemic—the mayors can step up and push for improvements. In addition to possibly connecting families to local resources, the mayors may see the wisdom in urging resources and solutions from state and federal officials. After all, what mayor would want to know babies, infants, toddlers and children are suffering in their communities?

Most people don’t know much about how their elected officials should be working for them. It can be intimidating. Those who help families with essential needs (e.g., school liaisons) typically would be ideal to make this happen. 

Take Action Arrow LI2HEAR US has produced a (free) simple guide to help families make this somewhat daunting connection. Contact Diane to request the guide and for information on this or other HEAR US projects.

 Dawn's life ended too soon, she died July 8, 2023, age 48, with her children by her side. But her courageous example lives on and will have a positive impact for countless families experiencing homelessness. 

Dawn and her family participated in the HEAR US film projectHidden in Plain Sight - Families Experiencing Housing Instability in New Mexico, for the New Mexico Public Education Department's McKinney-Vento program. Watch and share.

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The story of how New Day Dawning began...

A New Day Dawning for Compassionate Action!

At the beginning of April, 2022, I picked up Dawn Zephier, a Las Cruces mother, and we headed over to City Hall to meet with Mayor Ken Miyagishima for an important conversation on the topic of invisible family homelessness. 

This marked the launch of our new project, Mamas and Mayors. My one-woman national nonprofit, HEAR US Inc., has focused on family and youth homelessness since I hit the road in my camper in 2005, shortly before Mayor Ken was elected. Las Cruces was on my route then, and I’ve visited several times since. 

The Mayor and I touched base over the years. He was  a compassionate leader for the city with the motto “People Helping People,” and a perfect mayor to inaugurate Mamas and Mayors. Dawn, who shared her recent experience of family homelessness for my film project, was a willing and capable spokesperson. He left office, the longest serving mayor of this city, in 2023.

Homelessness in Las Cruces has sadly, but not surprisingly, surged over the years, as it has everywhere. The best efforts of a dedicated cadre of human service workers have not stemmed the tide of houseless adults and kids, far beyond those visible on street corners and in Tent City.

Homeless families scrape together a place to sleep, typically a fragile arrangement easily shattered. Covid complicated things immensely. Crowded conditions put everyone in jeopardy. Families with scant resources rotate between pricey motels, sleep in their vehicles, and/or stay in places not fit for human habitation. None of those options puts them in contact with organizations focused on addressing family homelessness. 

One factor in this crisis—the loss of their family shelter years ago. While homeless shelters don’t solve homelessness, they do provide a safe place for families to regroup. Dawn related her family’s traumatizing experience at a Las Cruces motel—a violent outburst by their next door neighbor—sadly a common occurrence. When the family shelter located on the Community of Hope campus closed several years ago, it was a great loss. 

You may ask, how many families are homeless? No one knows. No agency focuses on families, nor does anyone keep track. Las Cruces School District’s Project LINK works directly and capably with students experiencing homelessness, but their contact doesn’t begin to identify all families and youth without housing. They’ve served upwards of 1,300 students.

For families, escaping homelessness is a matter of luck. This is not to dismiss the stalwart efforts of a few agencies with extremely limited resources who can’t begin to meet the needs of LC families because of the lack of decent, affordable housing. 

When we met with the Mayor, Dawn and I raised the issue of no family shelter, which would have been immensely helpful when she and her extended family of 9 needed a safe haven. 

Other issues Dawn raised: 

  • Request the Gospel Rescue Mission, the only local family “shelter," to open their gates in the morning before 8 so kids could get to school on time. Kids in homeless situations have it hard enough. Walking into class late every day adds to their agony.
  • Push for more affordable housing options so families aren't stuck in homelessness for so long. Las Cruces could use more focus on this. The General Obligation (GO) bonds proposed on the November ballot would be useful in developing affordable housing. 
  • Increase agency involvement when families are placed in motels so they are not further traumatized, neglected, forgotten. This doesn't begin to touch the families in motels on their own dime, which led to…
  • Advocate for the Homeless Children and Youth Act with Members of Congress. Now, families paying for their own motel are not considered homeless enough to qualify for HUD housing assistance. This bipartisan bill would expand the definition. It would be a good issue to discuss at candidate forums. 

In the 5 months Dawn’s extended family of 9 bounced around Las Cruces without a place to call home, she learned valuable lessons, including the need to speak up for yourself and others. As I sat and listened to her share her family’s experiences, she validated the premise behind Mamas and Mayors.

When those who know the issues best courageously speak to those in power, we can expect change. Shining a bright light on family homelessness is way overdue. It’s a new day, thanks to Dawn!

For those interested in Mamas and Mayors simple steps, contact Diane. This project has been designed to be simple, relying on courageous moms and willing mayors.
 ABOUT New Day Dawning

 

 

Memorial Blanket December 21, 2024
Philadelphia Independence Hall
Make your blankets now!
Memorial Blanket
U.S. Supreme Court, Grants Pass v Johnson, April 21, 2024, Washington, DC.
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Memorial Blanket 2023, Pennsylvania State Capitol, Harrisburg, PA. 

Photos (c) Diane Nilan 

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The Memorial Blanket art display on 12/21/22 in front of the
Reflecting Pool at the US Capitol. 
Photo (c) Diane Nilan 2022DC Blankets

 

1,179 handmade blankets from knitters, crocheters, and quilters across the country blanketed the Capitol lawn. They were made by strangers for strangers, a true work of love.

The blankets are a stark reminder of people who live and die on the streets of the US every year. 

Following the one-day event, blankets were donated to people in need.

The project was sponsored by the Charles Bruce Foundation.

Photo (c) Diane Nilan 2022IL Blankets

Quilts in the foreground were submitted by HEAR US. "These Little Piggies are Homeless" photos by Pat Van Doren are in the center of the quilts that were finished by volunteers in Illinois.

Babies' and toddlers' footprints from 3 North Carolina programs serving young homeless children surround the Piggies images.

The larger red, white and blue quilt has the iconic image of "Charlie" in the center. This represents the decades' long Illinois involvement in strenghtening educational rights for homeless students. 

WATCH: Memorial Blanket photo collection by Diane Nilan   

WATCH: End of the Memorial Blanket Day by Diane Nilan 

   
 Washington Post, 12/22/22

Handmade blankets for homeless crafted with ‘love’
come to Capitol Hill

 The Progressive Magazine, 12/29/22

On a Mission to End Homelessness, and Spread Warmth

EARLIER COVERAGE of the HEAR US Memorial Blanket Activities: 

►Watch this NCTV news segment about the unique blankets being made in Illinois!

► Diane worked with 3 North Carolina communities to create Piggies blankets for babies using Pat Van Doren's iconic "These Little Piggies are Homeless" image.

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Here's a 1-minute TV newsclip showing this heartwarming process.

 

 

 

 


► Here are the news stories about the Memorial Blanket Project

►Here's an adorable look at a "Piggies" event. (2-min)

 

 

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