Amanda's Place provides stable housing, individualized recovery plans, and job-readiness support to men and women reentering society. Your gift funds housing, counseling, and programs that cut recidivism and restore dignity.

Residents sheltered since launch
Residents employed within 6 months
Reduced reoffending among graduates
Local volunteer hours last year
Structured housing with case management, work training, counseling, and peer support to reduce recidivism and care
Case plans and peer mentoring help returning citizens secure housing, find work, and rebuild stable lives and hope
Vocational training, resume help, and employer partnerships give residents skills, confidence, and steady work now.
“After release I had nowhere to go. Amanda's Place gave me a bed, real support, and a job lead. I’m working and rebuilding trust with my family.” — Marcus, program graduate

Confidential assessment, immediate shelter placement, and an individualized recovery plan begin within days.
Weekly counseling, peer groups, job-readiness classes, and case management for steady progress.
Residents move toward independent housing, employment, and community reconnection with our support.

Host a donation drive, sponsor a bed, offer hiring pathways, or volunteer time. Local businesses and faith groups are pivotal partners in reentry success.
A one-time gift closes immediate gaps: housing deposits, emergency counseling, bus passes, and meals. Your donation turns crisis into a stable next step for a returning neighbor.
Sustaining monthly donations fund ongoing case management, support groups, and training programs. Monthly gifts provide predictability that boosts long-term outcomes and housing stability.
Sponsor a resident for a month to cover housing, recovery counseling, and job support. Sponsors receive updates, progress stories, and a tangible connection to impact.

Leads program design, staff training, and partner relations to ensure residents receive integrated recovery and job-readiness services.

Coordinates individualized plans, court navigation, and community resources to smooth the reentry transition for each resident.

Builds volunteer programs, coordinates donation drives, and trains community members to work respectfully with residents in recovery.
Men and women leaving incarceration who commit to the house rules and recovery program are eligible; each applicant receives an intake assessment.
Local donations fund housing, counseling, job training, emergency needs, and case management — resources that directly reduce barriers to stable reentry.
Yes — we partner with local employers to create job pathways and provide onboarding support for both employer and resident.