Penates, Inc.

Penates, Inc. Our mission is to improve lives of families, single men, and single women experiencing homelessness

04/14/2026

🚨 SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUTH! 🚨

Are you between the ages of 14–20? Don’t miss your chance to gain paid, hands-on work experience this summer through the Suffolk County Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP)! 💼✨

✅ Build your resume
✅ Learn new skills
✅ Earn money

📲 Apply online:
https://www.suffolkcountyny.gov/Depa.../Labor/Youth-Programs

📍 Prefer a paper application? Pick one up at the Wyandanch Community Resource Center.

📞 Questions? Call 631-631-1960

⏰ Deadline to apply: Friday, June 18th

Tag a young person who should apply! 👇

04/14/2026

WARNING: THIS NEWSLETTER IS ABOUT DOMESTIC ABUSE

It was late enough that most of the residents had gone to bed and the shelter was finally quiet.

“Janet” sat silently on a chair nursing a Styrofoam cup of room temperature water.

I sat down across the table from her and asked if she was having trouble sleeping.

Janet didn’t respond. She had a blank stare on her face.

Eventually—with her gaze still fixed on nothing—Janet said, “Man, I loved Jack. And Jack really loved me. Everyone could see we were in love.” She paused for a sip of water. “I know it is cliché, but he was the ‘love of my life.’”

I really wanted to ask what happened to Jack. I had been through enough late-night-shelter-talks to know better.

Janet continued, “The first time I tried to leave him, he put me in the hospital. The second time was worse.”

One of the other residents asked us to lift our feet up so he could sweep up the floor under the table.

When the man was gone, Janet said, “I don’t really know what happened. I woke up on the floor with dried blood matting down my hair. I asked Jack what had happened and he said I tripped and hit my head on a coffee table.”

Janet stood up, finished her water, said “Thanks for listening” in my direction and walked off to bed.

“Why don’t you just leave?”
On average, a survivor of domestic abuse leaves seven times before staying away for good.

A lot of people struggle to understand that.

There are a lot of reasons to stay, including:
• Lack of money/housing
• Cultural or religious pressure
• Children
• Emotional ties to the abuser
• Fear

That last one is important. Survivors are in the most danger when they try to leave.

What do you do when someone trusts you with their story?

On Thursday, I’m doing an interview and live Q&A with Dr. Carolyn West, an expert in domestic abuse (Information below).

She shared these for when someone tells you they’ve been abused:

What NOT to say:
• “Why don’t you leave?”
• “Why did you wait so long to leave?”
• “What did you do to provoke the abuse?”
• “Is it abuse if he didn’t hit you?”

What TO say:
• “I believe you.”
• “I’m sorry this happened to you.”
• “I appreciate you trusting me.”
• “You are not alone.”
• “I care about you and am here to listen or help in any way I can.”
• “You didn’t deserve what happened to you. There is no excuse for it.”

If someone trusts you enough to share, resist the urge to jump immediately into action. Listen first. Support first. Let them lead.

Take care of each other (and yourself) this week.

Peace,
Ryan

________________________________________

LIVE TRAINING
Domestic Violence: A Conversation with Dr. Carolyn West
DATE: April 16, 2025
TIME: 1:00 PM Central Time (8 AM Hawaii / 10 AM Alaska / 11 AM Pacific / Noon Mountain / 2 PM Eastern)
LENGTH: 60 Minute Training

RECORDING: The Zoom recording will be available for 1 month after the live event. The training will also be added to the Homeless Training Academy in Niche Academy where you can view and obtain a certificate.

REGISTRATION:
Available exclusively to member organizations (the Zoom registration link has been emailed to you). Libraries in the following states are covered through your statewide membership: Alaska, Arizona, British Columbia (Canada), Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, and Wisconsin.
If your organization has a membership and you'd like to be added to our system to receive the webinar link directly to your inbox, give us your information using this link: http://bit.ly/MonthlyWebinarSignup

ABOUT THE GUEST:
Dr. Carolyn M. West is an award-winning author, internationally recognized speaker, documentary filmmaker, expert witness, and Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Washington. For more than three decades, she has been investigating gender-based violence, with a special focus on domestic violence, s*xual assault, and s*x trafficking in the lives of marginalized populations. She has authored more than 100 academic publications, including the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence’s Technical Assistance Guidance Series: Serving Black Women Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence. Dr. West has given Congressional Briefings and hundreds of keynote addresses, workshops, and presentations around the country. Dr. West has appeared as a featured expert in documentaries including Chris Brown: A History of Violence; Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy; Hunted by My Husband: The Untold Story of the D.C. Sniper.

02/19/2026

In 1854, London had a bad cholera outbreak.

Doctors worked around the clock. They treated patient after patient — fever, cramps, dehydration. Some survived. Many didn't.

And every morning, there were new patients at the door.

Nobody stopped to ask why. They just worked tirelessly to treat the patients.

Then a doctor named John Snow (nope, not the character from Game of Thrones) did something simple. He drew a map. He marked every death in the neighborhood and looked for a pattern.

Every single one pointed back to the same water pump on Broad Street.

The water was contaminated. Everyone who drank from it got sick.

Dr. Snow walked over to Broad Street and removed the handle on the pump.

The outbreak stopped almost immediately.

Homelessness
In 2024, Veteran’s Administration (US) housed nearly 48,000 homeless veterans.

That’s fantastic, right?

Not so fast.

The total number of homeless vets in the United States only dropped by 2,700 people.

What the heck??? Why is that??

In the same year, about 45,300 veterans became homeless.

The math is simple:
48,000 vets left homelessness
45,300 vets entered homelessness
A total reduction of only 2,700 vets.

It is called the “inflow problem.”

About 10 years ago, I ran the numbers at the shelter where I worked.

In a typical week, 16 people became homeless and arrived at our door.

That meant just to keep our numbers the same, we had to get 16 people out of homelessness every single week.

Homelessness is Like Cholera

Our world’s approach to homelessness right now is like the doctors running around London in 1854.

We are working REALLY hard to get people out of homelessness back into homes.
And we are doing a great job!

So, why isn’t homelessness going down?

Because for every person we get out of homelessness, one (or more) people become homeless.

How do we remove the “pump handle” on homelessness?

The research is clear.

Lack of affordable housing is the contaminated well.

The good news is that affordable housing is fixable, therefore so is homelessness.

The bad news is it won’t be cheap or politically popular.

There are two realities that we cannot avoid:
• Until we get serious about affordable housing, homelessness is here to stay.
• If housing continues its current trend away from affordability, homelessness IS going to get worse.

Thank you to everyone working on creating more affordable housing and thank you to everyone working on the frontline of the homeless crisis (shelters, street outreach, etc.).

Peace,

Ryan
Source: "What Would It Take to End Homelessness in the United States?" — Colburn et al., Housing Policy Debate, 2025

12/19/2025
Our family shelter holiday door decorating contest winners 🏆🎄🏆🎄 These embody true family teamwork 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 Congratulatio...
12/19/2025

Our family shelter holiday door decorating contest winners 🏆🎄🏆🎄 These embody true family teamwork 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 Congratulations 🎉

12/18/2025
12/18/2025
Sincere thanks to the North islip Democratic Club 🎄🎁💝🎄🎁💝 for your wonderful generosity!
12/18/2025

Sincere thanks to the North islip Democratic Club 🎄🎁💝🎄🎁💝 for your wonderful generosity!

Our shelter residents and staff enjoying the holiday season 🌲🎁☃️🤶🏼🎄🕯️😁 with the help of some very special community frie...
12/14/2025

Our shelter residents and staff enjoying the holiday season 🌲🎁☃️🤶🏼🎄🕯️😁 with the help of some very special community friends 🎄❤️🎄❤️

Address

1360 5TH Avenue
Bay Shore, NY

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+16316652866

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