Capital Region Cares Capital Region Cares 2018-2019 | Page 103
A
s 18-year-old Margaret Gomez
was about to complete her final
GED exam, she started having
contractions. She rushed from
the room before finishing, though
would go on to reschedule and
pass. In May 2006, Gomez spoke at
graduation to her 50-person class.
Her 2-year-old daughter, Julyza, and
weeks-old son, Junior, were in the
crowd.
“If it hadn’t been for
them, I would have
been alone in that
room in labor.”
— Margaret Gomez, youth development
director, Tubman House
Bridget Alexander, founder and execu-
tive director of Waking the Village.
Gomez is one of 180 young families
who have gone through the Tubman
House since it was founded in 2003.
Gomez leaned heavily on the Tubman
House for support during her months
in the program as she filed for divorce
and a restraining order against her
husband and earned her GED diploma.
In fact, her coach from the program
attended Junior’s birth as a doula after
she rushed out of her exam.
“If it hadn’t been for them, I would
have been alone in that room in labor,”
Gomez says.
After receiving her GED certifi-
cate, Gomez attended Cosumnes River
College before earning a cosmetology
degree from Castelos Academy. These
days, she puts those skills to use on
weekends and evenings, while working
full-time as youth development direc-
tor at the Tubman House, coaching
young parents through many of the
same obstacles she navigated herself.
“Maggie has lots of wisdom to
share,” Alexander says. “She is full of
humor and warmth. She is a fantastic
mother and a dedicated social worker.”
Gomez can relate to the women
she’s now working to help. “I’ve seen
myself a little bit in all of the moms, in
one way or another.” n
ILIE
Just six months prior, Gomez’s life
had looked dramatically different.
She was in an unhealthy marriage
and unstable living situation. “I had a
1-year-old daughter, and I was three
months pregnant,” she says. “I had a
caseworker who would come and visit
me at my house — I was actually living
in a garage — it was not a place for a
family to live. So she told me about the
Tubman House.”
Tubman House, part of the
Sacramento-based Waking the Village
nonprofit organization, provides 24
months of free housing and a structured
support program to young homeless
parents 18-24 years old. During their
stay, parents and children live in one
of two co-operative houses and work
with coaches to navigate obstacles to
stability. Monday through Friday, the
residents can use amenities to enroll in
or complete schoolwork or access ser-
vices, like health care. They can also
attend workshops to learn how to bud-
get, parent, rent their own apartment,
cook healthy meals and more.
“Within our housing programs, 75
percent secure employment, 65 per-
cent attend college and over 90 percent
exit to stable housing with supports in
place to maintain momentum,” says
Eva Roethler is the special sections edi-
tor for Comstock’s magazine. On Twitter
@EvaRoethler.
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