COMMUNITY RESOURCES COMPILED BY

COMMUNITY
RESOURCES
COMPILED BY
Montgomery County Office of Family and Children First
Revised
SEPTEMBER 2013
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CLOTHING ASSISTANCE
Clothes That Work …………………………………………………….…………….. 6
Work Ready Program ………………………………………………….…………….. 6
EDUCATIONAL/VOCATIONAL
Dayton Board of Education …….…………………………………………...……..…
Eastway Behavioral Healthcare……………………..………………………………..
Educational Opportunity Center …….……………………………………………….
Goodwill Easter Seals Miami Valley ……...………………….….....…....…………..
Disabilities Rights Ohio…………………………………………….......…………….
Job Center, The …........................................................................................................
Miami Valley Career Technology Center (MVCTC) …..............................................
Montgomery County Board of Developmental Disabilities Services ………………..
Montgomery County Department of Job & Family Services
One Stop Employment Training Center………………………..
Ohio Rehabilitation Service Commission
Bureau of Services for the Visually Impaired (BSVI)……………………………...
Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation (BVR) ….…………..………...………….…..
We Care Arts …………………………………………………………………......…..
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FAMILY VIOLENCE
Artemis Center …………………………………………………….……………..….. 11
Montgomery County Job & Family Services Adult Protective Services…………….. 11
FOOD ASSISTANCE
Catholic Social Services Pantry ……………………………………………………...
East Dayton Food Pantry ……………….……………………………………………
Evangel Church of God ………………………………………………………………
Ginghamsburg Church – Fort McKinley Food Pantry ……………………………….
Life Resource Centre …………………………………………………………………
Montgomery County Job & Family Services Ohio Directions ………………………
Northeast Churches Emergency Center …………………………………………...
St. Paul United Methodist Church Food Pantry ……………………………………...
Wesley Community Center (see under General Supportive Services)………………..
West Carrollton Food Pantries . ………………………………………………………
Womanline ……………..……………………………………………………………..
Women, Infants & Children (WIC) ……..……………………………………………
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GENERAL SUPPORTIVE SERVICES
Good Neighbor House (Human Services and Health Care Services)………………… 15
Gospel Mission (lunch, clothing, after school/summer camps, computer programs)... 16
Wesley Community Center (clothing, food, computer training, self-sufficiency)........ 16
HEALTH/MEDICAL
AIDS Resource Center of Ohio ……………………………………………………… 17
COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS OF GREATER DAYTON
Federally Qualified Health Centers – (FQHC)
Alex Central Health Center
Corwin Nixon Health Center ………………………………………………………...
Drew Health Center…….. ……………………………………………………….…..
East Dayton Health Center …………………………………………………………..
Southview Health Center …………………………………………………………….
Victor Cassano Health Center………………………….……………………………..
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FIVE RIVERS HEALTH CENTERS
Federally Qualified Health Centers – (FQHC Look-Alikes)
Center for Women’s Health ………………………………………………………….
Family Health Center ………………………………………………………….……..
Medical Surgery Health Center……………………………………………………….
Pediatrics………………………………………………………………………..…….
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Dayton Children’s Hospital…………………….…………………………………….
Good Samaritan Hospital……………………………………………………………..
Good Samaritan North Health Center………………………………………………...
Grandview Hospital…………………………………………………………………..
Kettering Medical Center…………………………………………………………….
Miami Valley Hospital…………………………………………………………….….
Montgomery County Department of Job & Family Services Medicaid……………...
Public Health - Dayton & Montgomery County ……………………………………..
Reach Out of Montgomery County…………………………………………………...
Samaritan Homeless Clinic…………………………………………………………...
Sycamore Hospital ………….………………………………………………………..
Unified Health Solutions………………………………………………………….….
US Department of Veteran Affairs Medical Center……………………………….….
Wright Patterson Medical Center………………………………………………….….
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HOUSING/UTILITIES/SHELTER ASSISTANCE
Community Action Partnership ………………………………………………………
Dayton Ohio Habitat for Humanity, Inc. …………………………………………….
Diversion Team (emergency assistance through Children’s Services)...………….….
Greater Dayton Premier Management …..………………………………….………..
Montgomery County Department of Job & Family Services
Prevention, Retention & Contingency (PRC) …………………………
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Montgomery County Veteran’s Service Commission ………………………..……… 26
The Mustard Seed Foundation, Inc. (teen custodial mothers/children) …….……….. 26
HOMELESSNESS PREVENTION AND REHOUSING
When an individual or family is homeless, they can seek assistance through the four gateway
shelters:
Homefull Prevention…………………………………………………………………..
Daybreak………………………………………………………………………………
Gettysburg Gateway for Men…………………………………………………………
St. Vincent de Paul Gateway Shelter for Women and Families………………………
YWCA……………………………………….....…………………………………….
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For individuals and families who are living on the street, in their cars or in other places not
meant for human habitation the following services are available:
PATH………………………………………………………………………………… 29
VA Health Care for Homeless Veterans……………………………………………... 29
Following is a list of organizations that provide housing assistance for specific populations;
however, they may only be accessed through the shelters by referral or as noted.
AIDS Resource Center……………………………………………………….……….
Daybreak……………………………………………………………………….……..
Mercy Manor………………………………………………………………….……....
Miami Valley Housing Opportunities………………………………………….….….
Holt Street Miracle Center…………………………………………………….…..…..
Homefull…………………………………………………………………………...….
Linda Vista……………………………………………………………………………
Places…………………………………………………………………………….…....
Red Cross Family Living Center………………………………………………….…..
Volunteers of America……………………………………………………………...…
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LEGAL SERVICES
Dayton Mediation Center …..………………………………….………………....….. 33
Legal Aid of Western Ohio …..………………………………….……………....…... 34
Disability Rights Ohio (formerly Ohio Legal Rights Service)…………………….…. 34
MENTAL HEALTH/ALCOHOL AND DRUG ADDICTION SERVICES
Al-Anon / Alateen Family Groups ……………………………………………..…….
Alcoholics Anonymous ………………………………………………………..……..
Center for Alcoholism & Drug Addiction Services (CADAS)………………………
CrisisCare ……………………………………………………………………….……
Day-Mont Behavioral Healthcare ………………………………………….…..…….
Eastway Behavioral Healthcare …................................................................................
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Family Service Association …......................................................................................
Nova Behavioral Health Inc.….....................................................................................
Project CURE ………………………………………………………….……………..
Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation ……………………………………………...…
Samaritan Behavioral Health, Inc. …............................................................................
South Community Behavioral Health Care ………………………………..…………
Suicide Prevention Center …........................................................................................
Urban Minority Alcohol & Drug Addiction Outreach Program (UMADAOP)….......
US Department of Veteran Affairs Medical Center ….................................................
Womanline Counseling Center …..…..........................................................................
Women’s Recovery Center …......................................................................................
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MISCELLANEOUS
Family Services Association Community Services for the Deaf …………………….
Center for Healthy Communities Kinship Navigator Program……………………….
Mentoring Collaborative, The …..................................................................................
Dayton-Montgomery County Ombudsman’s Office ………………………………...
Social Security Administration ……………………………………………………....
United Way’s HelpLink 2-1-1 ………………………………………………………..
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PRESCRIPTION ASSISTANCE
AIDS Resource Center of Ohio (see under Health)………..………………………… 17
Reach Out of Montgomery County (see under Health)...……………………………. 21
Unified Health Solutions (see under Health) ….……………..………………............ 22
More information on Community Resources can be obtained by contacting
UNITED WAY’S HELPLINK 2-1-1 from a landline phone.
Call 225-3000 from a mobile phone or landline.
or go online to the HelpLink 211 Resource Directory at
www.daytonunitedway.org/find_help/helplinkmain and do your own search.
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CLOTHING ASSISTANCE
CLOTHES THAT WORK
1133 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard, #392
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 222-3778
Boutique hours: Monday – Friday from 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Every second Saturday from 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
www.clothesthatwork.org
Provides free interview-appropriate and work-appropriate clothing to women, men and older teens
seeking employment.
Job seekers must have a referral from a partner agency listed on our website.
Customer must have an interview scheduled or have worked no longer than 30 days.
Services provided to job seekers with an income at or below 200% of the federal poverty level.
WORK READY PROGRAM
719 South Main Street
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 341-5000
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.cap-dayton.org
Provides employment preparation and support assistance to eligible participants through free job search
skills and job readiness training, interviewing techniques and resume building/writing.
EDUCATIONAL/VOCATIONAL
DAYTON BOARD OF EDUCATION – Office of Exceptional Children and Vocational
Education
Dayton Public Schools Administration Building
115 South Ludlow Street
Dayton, Ohio 45402
(937) 542-3353 (Office of Exceptional Children)
7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.dps.k12.oh.us
Dayton Public Schools special education students may continue attending school until graduation or their
22nd birthday. There are no fees for full-time special education students. Special education services include
vocational assessment, vocational counseling, vocational program placement, work study for unsupported
job placement, coordinator services for supported job placement, follow-up services, and transition services.
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EASTWAY BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE
600 Wayne Ave.
Dayton, OH 45410
(937) 496-2000
www.eastway.org
Service Locations:
Adult Services:
600 Wayne Ave.
Dayton, OH 45410
(937) 496-2000
Provides diagnostic assessment, psychiatry, nursing, psychotherapy, substance abuse treatment, community
support services, employment services, housing services, primary care, and pharmacy services.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8-5, by appointment
Fees based on sliding scale depending on the program
Forensic Psychiatry Center of Western Ohio:
600 Wayne Ave.
Dayton, OH 45410
(937) 463-2953
Provides court-ordered psychological assessments for adults and juveniles and case-specific opinions
regarding mental health/legal issues.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8-5, by appointment
Supportive Living Solutions: 310 Troy St.
Dayton, OH 45404
(937) 531-7000
Provides housing placement and support for individuals with severe and persistent mental illnesses, who are
referred by the ADAMHS Board’s network of providers.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8-5, by appointment
Fees based on sliding scale depending on the program
Employment Services:
131 North Hedges Street
Dayton, OH 45403
(937) 531-4195
Provides job training and placement for people with disabilities; referrals from the Rehabilitation Services
Commission and the ADAMHS Board’s network of providers.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8-5, by appointment
Fees based on sliding scale depending on the program
Child and Adolescent Services:
1110 Webster St.
Dayton, OH 45405
(937) 463-2955
Provides diagnostic assessment, psychiatry, nursing, psychotherapy, substance abuse treatment, community
support services, and specialized education services.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8-5, by appointment
Fees based on sliding scale depending on the program
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EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY CENTER
1133 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard, Suite 340
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 223-5074
8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
Provides information and referrals to schools, agencies, and individuals regarding post-secondary education
opportunities and special services such as G.E.D. Also offers a resource library (including a computerized
database) concerning careers, educational programs, and financial aid. Services are for ages 12 and over.
Provides career and educational counseling for individuals 12 years and older. Offers career counseling;
computerized database access; educational and financial aid opportunities in post-secondary education (2year and 4-year colleges); technical and vocational schools; testing; career planning; and admission and
financial aid application assistance.
GOODWILL EASTER SEALS MIAMI VALLEY
1511 Kuntz Road
Dayton, OH 45404
(937) 461-4800
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.gesmv.org
Offers more than 40 services and programs which help people with disabilities or disadvantaged conditions
discover their strengths, skills, abilities, and vocational interests. Provides job placement services, business
skills development, senior and children services. Call for information regarding specifics and fees.
DISABILITIES RIGHTS OHIO
Ohio Client Assistance Program
50 West Broad Street, #1400
Columbus, OH 43215
800-282-9181
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.olrs.ohio.gov/olrs-services
Ohio Client Assistance Program – Advocates for people with disabilities seeking services from agencies
funded by the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and provided by the Ohio Rehabilitation Services Commission.
Information & Referral: Provides information and referral to services for people with disabilities and
publishes a newsletter "Common Ground."
THE JOB CENTER
1111 South Edwin C. Moses Blvd.
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 225-5627
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Mondays – Friday
www.thejobcenter.org
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The Job Center is the largest one-stop employment and training center in the United States. This
public/private partnership is made up of forty plus organizations housed in an eight and a half acre facility.
The mission of the Job Center is to serve as a resource for labor-market exchange and workforce
development while providing individuals and families with financial, medical, and other support services
essential to strengthening the quality of life.
MIAMI VALLEY CAREER TECHNOLOGY CENTER (MVCTC)
6800 Hoke Road
Clayton, OH 45315
(937) 837-7781
8:00 a.m. – 10:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.mvctc.com
Provides skill training, vocational classes, basic education for adults, and GED preparation. Continuous
enrollment offered for adult basic education. Fees vary with the length of the program. Provides vocational
training for 11th and 12th grade students from certain schools districts in Montgomery, Miami, Darke,
Warren and Preble Counties.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY BOARD OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES SERVICES
(DDS)
5450 Salem Avenue
Dayton, OH 45426-1450
(937) 837-9200
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.mcbdds.org/site/
Provides facility based experiences including employment, habilitation and community outing options.
Facilities offer specialized activities related to the interests of persons served.
We also provide community based experiences including employment and volunteer options based on
persons choice, desire and assessed need.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB & FAMILY SERVICES
One Stop Employment Training Center
The Job Center
1111 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45408
(937) 225-5627
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Monday – Friday
www.thejobcenter.org
Job Seekers – The Job Bank is the hub of the Job Center. Employment Consultants are there to help anyone
in need of job search resources. Free internet access, free phones, and free resume services are just some of
the potential services for everyone.
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Employers – When you work with the Job Bank, you will work with an Employment Consultant who will
work with you on improving your recruitment efforts and help you navigate the many services available
through the Job Center. The Job Bank maintains the area's largest resume database ranging from entry level
to professional job applicants.
OHIO REHABILITATION SERVICES COMMISSION
BUREAU OF SERVICES FOR THE VISUALLY IMPAIRED (BSVI)
1435 Cincinnati Street, Suite 200
Dayton, OH 45417
(937)331-5000
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM (Monday – Friday)
www.rsc.ohio.gov
Provides services to help individuals with disabilities obtain and maintain employment. To meet eligibility
criteria, an individual’s disability must present a significant impediment to employment.
Services may include diagnostic evaluations, vocational counseling, job placement, job training, as well as
referral to other available resources to help individuals achieve a vocational goal. BSVI serves individuals
with visual impairment after best correction. The Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation (BVR) serves
individuals with all other disabilities.
OHIO REHABILITATION SERVICES COMMISSION
Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation (BVR)
1435 Cincinnati St., Suite 200
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 331-5000
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.rsc.ohio.gov
Provides services to help individuals with disabilities obtain and maintain employment. Services may
include diagnostic evaluations, vocational counseling, job placement, job training, as well as referral to
other available resources to help individuals achieve a vocational goal. Services may include collaboration
with a supported employment partner for those needing ongoing services. RSC will collaborate with other
available partners and resources to help individuals reach their vocational goal.
WE CARE ARTS
3035 Wilmington Pike
Kettering, OH 45429
(937) 252-3937
9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Mondays - Fridays)
10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. (Saturdays)
www.wecarearts.org
Offers a training program in producing crafts and fine arts to persons who are handicapped, unemployed,
and underemployed adults who are 18 years of age or older, or senior citizens age 60 or older. Crafts are
sold in a boutique and participants receive 40% of the selling price. Individuals must be referred through a
case worker, case manager, or pastor.
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FAMILY VIOLENCE
ARTEMIS CENTER FOR ALTERNATIVES TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
310 West Monument Avenue
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 461-5091
(937) 222-SAFE (7233) 24-Hour Domestic Violence Hotline
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday: Business Hours)
www.artemiscenter.org
Provides support services to domestic violence victims or persons threatened with abuse. Services include:
information and referral, telephone crisis intervention, advocacy, safety planning, court accompanied
support, and case management. Assists victims with applying for the Ohio Victims’ Compensation
Program. Offers support groups and individual therapy for children and parenting services to non-offending
homes experiencing domestic violence.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES
Adult Protective Services
1111 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45422 (General Mailing Zip - 45408)
(937) 225-4906
www.mcohio.org/services/jobandfamily/services/medicaid/adult_protective_services.html
Adult Protective Services (APS) investigates suspected abuse, neglect, self-neglect and exploitation of
persons primarily age 60 and over. An assessment is done to determine what services are available to help
the client. Our goal is to help clients remain independent in their homes as long as possible by preventing,
reducing or remedying conditions that may cause their endangerment.
Prior to a home visit, we like to know as much about the person and problem as possible. In addition to a
description of the problem that requires our attention, please provide the following information about the
client:
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Name, address, phone number
Social Security number
Date of birth
Interested or involved family, friends, or caregivers
Routine referrals must be started within three working days and emergencies within 24 hours. Upon
completing a 30-day investigation, caseworkers work with the client to decide if the case should remain
open. If the caseworker determines the client lacks the capacity to make such a decision, the case can be
kept open longer with the client’s consent. Most cases are resolved in 60 days or less.
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FOOD ASSISTANCE
CATHOLIC SOCIAL SERVICES
922 West Riverview Avenue
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 223-7217
9:30 a.m. – 11:30 p.m. Monday - Friday (closed the first Friday of each month)
www.cssmv.org
Choice Pantry consumers are able to choose food for approximately five days per referral, every 30 days.
Consumers must provide address verification (utility, telephone bill, or other bill received within the past 30
days) as well as a picture ID for the head of household and identification for everyone living in the house (can
be social security cards or birth certificates). Zip codes served 45402, 05, 06, 08, 17, and 27. Alternative
hours can be arranged through the Pantry Coordinator. The Choice Pantry utilizes Virtual Case Manager as a
part of the Intake process and to assist with community referrals.
EAST DAYTON FOOD PANTRY
140 Stonemill Road
Dayton, OH 45409
(937) 223-2294
Monday – Thursday
Friday
10:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.
10:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
Provides food assistance to families in need. Amount of food is based on family size; assistance is
provided once a month. There must be 30 days between assistance periods. Picture I.D., social security
card and address verification is required. Social security cards must also be provided for children in
household.
Walk ins are accepted. Assistance is provided to those living in zip codes 45409, 45410 and the east side of
45402.
EVANGEL CHURCH OF GOD
132 North Smithville Road
Dayton, OH 45403
(937) 253-8342
10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. (Thursdays and Fridays)
www.evangelcogdayton.org
Clients must apply in person; bring a picture ID for each adult in the home and social security cards for
everyone in the household. Clients must also bring address verification which can be a bill mailed to their
home in the last 30 days that has their name and address on it.
Serves zip codes 45431 and the portion of 45403 that is east of Garland Avenue only. The same family
may be assisted only once every 30 calendar days.
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GINGHAMSBURG CHURCH - FORT MCKINLEY CAMPUS FOOD PANTRY
3721 West Siebenthaler Avenue
Dayton, OH 45406
(937) 276-2464 or 277-7484
10:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. (Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays)
www.ginghamsburg.org/fort
Provides food assistance to individuals and families in need who reside in zip codes 45406, 45416, and
45426. Clients must bring a photo identification, proof of residence (a bill within the last 30 days with their
name and address on it), and identification for everyone in the household.
LIFE RESOURCE CENTRE
425 North Findlay Street
Dayton, OH 45404
(937) 461-3625 for an appointment
1:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. (Monday – Thursday)
www.daytonlife.org
Provides baby food, formula, diapers, and other infant and child care items to needy persons, provided
every 60 days. Clients need an appointment and must provide proper identification (birth certificate, health
insurance card, driver’s license, but not social security card). They also offer pre-natal and parenting classes
to clients age 22 and younger that are income eligible. Call 223-9227 for classes.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES
Ohio Directions (FOOD STAMPS)
1111 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45422 (When providing mailing address to clients, 45408 should be used.)
(937) 225-6347
Office hours: Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
www.mcohio.org/services/jobandfamily/services/index.html
Who is eligible? - You may qualify for benefits if your household’s gross monthly income is at or under
130% of the federal poverty guidelines. Some households may qualify even if income is over the limit if
someone in the household is elderly/disabled. A review of your household expenses is conducted to
determine your monthly benefit amount if your income is under the limit or if the limit doesn’t apply. The
expenses reviewed include such things as rent or mortgage costs, gas, electric, water, sewer, telephone,
medical expenses and payments for child support and child care.
Documentation Needed: Applicants should bring the following documents to the interview when applying:
 Picture ID (valid driver’s license, state ID or passport)
 Social Security card
 Income verification (i.e., pay stub)
 Verification of household expenses including: rent/mortgage, utilities, child care and/or child
support payments
How to Apply: No appointment is necessary. You may apply at the Job Center, 1111 S. Edwin C. Moses
Boulevard, or online at http://ODJFSBenefits.ohio.gov. Upon receipt of the application, a telephone
interview will be scheduled.
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NORTHEAST CHURCHES EMERGENCY CENTER
359 Maryland Avenue
Dayton, OH 45404
(937) 281-1777
1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays)
Provides food assistance to individuals and families in need who reside in 45404, 45414, part of 45424 (not
Huber Heights).
ST. PAUL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH FOOD PANTRY
101 Huffman Avenue
Dayton, OH 45403
(937) 252-0689
10:00 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. (Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays)
Serves the portion of zip code 45403 that is west of Garland Avenue only.
Clients must apply in person; bring a picture ID for each adult in the home, social security cards for
everyone in the household and proof of address, which can be anything mailed to their home in the last 30
days that has their name and address on it. St. Paul offers two free meals per week, lunch on Tuesdays at
12:00 p.m. and breakfast on Saturdays at 9:00 a.m.
WEST CARROLLTON FOOD PANTRIES
26 North Locust Street
West Carrollton, OH 45439
24 hours/day, 7 days/week (answering machine only)
(937) 847-2274
2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Mondays and Thursdays) by appointment
Provides emergency food assistance to anyone in need in zip codes 45439 and 45449. Services are
provided once per household every 30 days. Caller must leave name, address, zip code and telephone
number. A volunteer will call when they are available.
WOMANLINE
301 East Sixth Street
Dayton, Ohio 45402
(937) 223-3446
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.womanlinedayton.org
Provides assistance with formula, baby food (occasionally), diapers and clothing up to two times per year.
There is a $2 administrative fee for each visit. Services are by appointment only.
If items are not available, customer will receive a voucher to another participating vendor. Customers must
have a picture I.D. and a social security card for all in household, and a medical card or birth certificate for
all children.
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WOMEN, INFANTS & CHILDREN (WIC)
Dr. Charles R. Drew Health Center
1323 West Third Street
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 225-4491
Sunrise WIC
Sunrise Center
1320 E. Fifth St.
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 225-6166
West Carrollton Clinic
113 East Central Avenue
West Carrollton, OH 45449
(937) 859-7974
Provides nutritional counseling, supplemental foods, breast feeding support, and information to promote
good health and safe delivery of a healthy baby. Open to women who are pregnant or have given birth
within the past six months, breastfeeding women up to one year after giving birth, and infants and children
up to five years old. Clients must be at or below 185% of the poverty guidelines. Call clinic for hours of
operation and for an appointment. For more information please visit the website at
http://www.phdmc.org/health/community/wic
GENERAL SUPPORTIVE SERVICES
GOOD NEIGHBOR HOUSE
627 E. First St.
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 224-3003
Clinic Number: (937) 224-3442
Business Hours: 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Monday – Thursday), Closed Fridays
Human Services: 900 am – 4:00 p.m. (Monday – Thursday), Closed Fridays
Clinic by APPOINTMENT ONLY
www.goodneighborhouse.org
GNH offer food pantry services, clothing & household items to underserved individuals and families
throughout the Miami Valley. We also provide uninsured individuals and families access to affordable and
quality healthcare visits that include dental, medical and optical. For pantry, clothing and household items,
client must have a photo ID for every adult in the household; social security cards for every member of the
household; and proof of residence such as a utility bill or lease. In addition, household items require a
referral from a Good Neighbor House qualified referral agency. Pantry can be accessed every 30 days;
clothing every 90 days; and household items once per year.
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GOSPEL MISSION
64 Burns Avenue
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 223-4513
www.gmission.org
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 1141, Dayton, OH 45401
The Gospel Mission operates a comprehensive inner-city mission near downtown Dayton, Ohio. It is open
to men and women, young and old, of any race, belief, or circumstance. Services include a full lunch buffet,
clothing department to outfit just about any need, after school youth programs, summer camps and
computer programs. Please visit http://gmission.org/schedule.aspx to view a list of programs and their
schedules.
WESLEY COMMUNITY CENTER, INC.
3730 Delphos Avenue
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 263-3556
www.wcciday.org
Business Hours: Monday – Friday 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Mission-“WCCI meets the spiritual and basic needs of families of all ages offering assistance in education
and training, employment and human assistance (food and clothing) in transitioning families toward selfsufficiency.”
Program Schedule
Senior Program and Lunch:
Monday - Friday
9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
After School Program:
Monday - Friday
2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Computer Training:
(Call for specific times)
Monday - Friday
9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Food pantry:
Monday- Friday
10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Free Clothing Store:
Thursday
10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Clothing Boutique
Tuesday/Wednesday
10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Employment Training:
Tuesday, Thursday
10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Male Awareness:
Call for days/times
Women’s Self-Sufficiency:
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Page 16 of 45
HEALTH
AIDS RESOURCE CENTER OHIO
15 West Fourth Street, Suite 200
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 461-2437 (Ohio HIV/STD Hotline); 800-332-2437
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday) Walk-ins welcome
www.arcohio.org
Provides funds and case management for the provision of health-related services for persons with
AIDS/HIV+. Emergency assistance can be accessed to pay for medical appointments, medications,
housing, medical/other community based referrals, and other HIV-related support services.
Provides rapid HIV testing via mouth swab (results in 20 minutes). Hours for rapid test are Mondays from
11:00 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS OF GREATER DAYTON
Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC)
ALEX CENTRAL HEALTH CENTER
5 S. Alex Rd.
Miamisburg, OH 45342
Phone: (937) 461-6869 for appointment
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Wednesday
10:00 am – 7:00 pm
http://www.communityhealthdayton.org/AlexCentralHealthCenter.html
CORWIN NIXON HEALTH CENTER
2351 Stanley Avenue
Dayton, OH 45404-1201
Phone: (937) 228-0990
Phone: (937) 461-6869 for appointment
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Wednesday
8:00 am – 7:00 pm
http://www.communityhealthdayton.org/CorwinNixonHealthCenter.html
DREW HEALTH CENTER
1323 West Third Street
Dayton, OH 45402-6714
Phone: (937) 461-4336
Phone: (937) 461-6869 for appointment
Monday & Thursday
8:00 am – 7:00 pm
Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Saturday (one Saturday per month)
8:00 am – 12 Noon
http://www.communityhealthdayton.org/DrewHealthCenter.html
Page 17 of 45
EAST DAYTON HEALTH CENTER
2132 East Third Street
Dayton, OH 45403-1977
Phone: (937) 528-6850
Phone: (937) 461-6869 for appointment
Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday
8:00 am – 6:00 pm
Thursday & Friday
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Saturday (one Saturday per month)
8:00 am – 12 Noon
http://www.communityhealthdayton.org/EastDaytonHealthCenter.html
SOUTHVIEW HEALTH CENTER
25 Thorpe Ave.
Dayton, OH 45420-1823
Phone: (937) 258-6330
Phone: (937) 461-6869 for appointment
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday
8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Wednesday
10:00 am – 7:00 pm
http://www.communityhealthdayton.org/SouthviewHealthCenter.html
VICTOR CASSANO HEALTH CENTER
165 South Edwin C. Moses Blvd
Dayton, OH 45402-8472
Phone: (937) 558-0180
Phone: (937) 558-0180 opt 3 for appointment
Monday - Friday
8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Saturday (one Saturday per month)
8:00 am to 12 noon
http://www.communityhealthdayton.org/VictorCassanoHealthCenter.html
FIVE RIVERS HEALTH CENTERS
Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alikes
CENTER FOR WOMEN'S HEALTH
One Wyoming St.
Wyoming level
Dayton, OH 45409
Fax: 937-208-2752
Phone: 937-208-2007
FAMILY HEALTH CENTER
2345 Philadelphia Dr.
Dayton, OH 45406
Fax: 937- 277-7249
Phone: 937-734-4141
Page 18 of 45
MEDICAL SURGICAL HEALTH CENTER
725 S. Ludlow St.
Dayton, OH 45402
Phone: 937-208-2004
Fax: 937- 208-8828
30 Apple St. - Ground Floor
Dayton, OH 45409
Phone: 937-208-2004
Fax: 937-208-8828
PEDIATRICS
One Wyoming St
Wyoming level
Dayton, OH 45409
Fax: 937-208-2797
Phone: 937-208-2781
DAYTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL
One Children’s Plaza
Dayton, OH 45404
(937) 641-3000
www.childrensdayton.org
*To get to Children’s Medical Center using a GPS, use this address: 600 Valley St., Dayton, OH 45404
GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL
2222 Philadelphia Drive
Dayton, OH 45406
(937) 734-2612
www.goodsamdayton.org
GOOD SAMARITAN NORTH HEALTH CENTER
9000 North Main Street
Dayton, OH 45415
(937) 734-6784
www.goodsamdayton.org/gsnhome.aspx?id=21968
GRANDVIEW MEDICAL CENTER
405 W. Grand Ave.
Dayton, OH 45405
(937) 723-3210
www.ketteringhealth.org
Page 19 of 45
KETTERING MEDICAL CENTER
3535 Southern Boulevard
Kettering, OH 45429
(937) 395-8659
www.ketteringhealth.org
MIAMI VALLEY HOSPITAL
One Wyoming Street
Dayton, OH 45409
(937) 208-8000
www.miamivalleyhospital.org
MONTGOMERY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES
MEDICAID
1111 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45422 (General Mailing Zip - 45408)
(937) 225-4148
www.mcohio.org/services/jobandfamily/services/index.html
Who is eligible?
To qualify for Medicaid, an individual must meet Medicaid citizenship requirements (certain non-citizens
may apply), be an Ohio resident, have or get a Social Security number, and meet certain financial
requirements.
Medicaid provides coverage to:
 Children up to age 19
 Pregnant women
 Individuals with disabilities
 Adults age 65 and over
 Individuals who are legally blind
 Families with children under 18
Documentation Needed:
Caseworkers will provide applicants with a list of needed documents. Applicants should bring the
following documents to the interview when applying:





Birth certificate
Verification of address
Verification of income
Picture ID (valid driver’s license or passport)
Verification of resources (bank statements, life insurance policies, car titles, bonds, trusts, vehicles
and property)
How to Apply:
No appointment is necessary. However, a face-to-face interview at MCDJFS offices in the Job Center is
required for the elderly, blind and disabled. Medical assistance requests for children and families do not
require a face-to-face interview; applications can be mailed and/or faxed. Office hours are Monday,
Page 20 of 45
Thursday and Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
For more information, please call 937-225-4148.
PUBLIC HEALTH - DAYTON & MONTGOMERY COUNTY
117 South Main Street
Reibold Building
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 225-5700
www.phdmc.org
The local health department for Montgomery County provides vital, cost-effective and culturally
proficient health services. Those services include preventing the spread of disease, protecting the
environment and promoting healthy behaviors. Public Health also links individuals to health care,
dental and mental health services provided by other community partners.
REACH OUT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY
Free Clinics and Charitable Pharmacy
25 East Foraker Street
Dayton, OH 45409
(937) 258-2000
www.daytonreachout.org
Hours:
Reach Out
for KIDS
Reach Out
Adult Walk-In Clinic
Community
Pharmacy
Monday
Doors open at 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday/
Thursday
Doors open at 5:00 p.m.
Monday–Friday
12–5:00 p.m.
Reach Out provides a safety net clinic located minutes from downtown Dayton. The clinic offers
an alternative to emergency visits for minor illnesses and chronic conditions that need immediate
attention. Clinic visits are at no cost to the patient. Ancillary services such as lab and x-ray are
limited based on current contracts.
Page 21 of 45
SAMARITAN HOMELESS CLINIC
921 S. Edwin C. Moses Blvd
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 461-1376
[email protected]
7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Monday &Thursday)
7:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m. (Tuesday & Wednesday)
7:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. (Friday)
Closed 11:30-12:30 for lunch
www.goodsamdayton.org/gshservices.aspx?id=12410
Integrated Health Care: Eligibility - Homelessness
Medical –primary care including medications
Mental Health – counseling & psychiatry
Dental – cleanings, fillings, extractions
Substance Abuse Recovery - counseling
Social Work – eligibility assistance, system navigation
Recuperative Care – acute illness recovery
Life Skills Education – daily classes
SYCAMORE HOSPITAL
4000 Miamisburg – Centerville Road
Miamisburg, OH 45342
(937) 384-8791
www.ketteringhealth.org
UNIFIED HEALTH SOLUTIONS
3440 Office Park Dr.
Dayton, OH 45439
(937) 220-6600
8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
Times for community programs vary depending on location
www.uhs-dayton.org
SCRIPT: Offers prescription assistance to individuals with no prescription insurance. Types of assistance
include emergency one-time assistance and assistance with obtaining long-term assistance through a thirdparty patient assistance program. Client must have no prescription drug coverage and income restrictions.
Medical need and income determine eligibility. If Medicare/Medicaid spend down cannot be met, client
may qualify. Clients must have a prescribed medication from a local physician. Clients may be assisted
only one time per fiscal year, except for senior citizens age 60+ who may receive assistance three times per
fiscal year.
The following documentation must be brought to the appointment: photo I.D. with current address, written
prescription or bottle(s) with refills, proof of household income, and Social Security cards for everyone in
the household. Client must schedule an appointment; walk-ins are not accepted.
Page 22 of 45
Project Empower: Offers a program for young parents (ages 21 and younger), which is designed to
empower them to make healthy drug-free choices for themselves and their children. Activities are offered
weekly at a number of community sites throughout Montgomery County. These weekly meetings provide a
format for young parents to get to know other young parents. They also offer focused discussion sessions
that deal with issues, such as parenting, anger control, relationships, and family empowerment activities.
First STEP: Offers a prevention and enrichment program for students ages 5 to 17 years old and is designed
to help empower students and families with the education, skills, and resources needed to succeed in life.
Focuses on self-esteem, positive decision-making, conflict resolution, and age appropriate prevention
tactics. Provides daily homework help; tutoring; weekly recreational/cultural activities and outings; health,
nutrition, and exercise education and information; and monthly family activities. Also provides in-school
prevention programs that include topics such as anger management, bullying prevention, and others based
on needs.
US DEPARTMENT OF VETERAN AFFAIRS MEDICAL CENTER
4100 West Third Street
Dayton, OH 45428
(937) 268-6511
www.dayton.va.gov
WRIGHT-PATTERSON MEDICAL CENTER
4881 Sugar Maple Drive, Area A, Building 830
Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 45433-5300
(937) 257-0837
www.wpafb.af.mil/units/wpmc/index.asp
HOUSING / UTILITIES / SHELTER ASSISTANCE
COMMUNITY ACTION PARTNERSHIP
719 South Main Street
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 341-5000
7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.cap-dayton.org
The Community Action Partnership of the Greater Dayton area provides emergency energy
payment assistance for eligible households. The Winter Crisis Program normally start in
November and continue through March of the following year or until funds are depleted.
Page 23 of 45
Assistance:
Households may receive up to $ 175 for a utility emergency and $750 for bulk fuel.
Funds can pay a customer’s initial payment of the percentage of income payment
plan plus (PIPP Plus), a PIPP Plus default, a reconnection fee or a deposit. Users of
bulk fuel, propane or bottled gas or solid fuels may also be eligible for assistance. A
customer may receive a delivery of fuel if their tank contains 25 percent or less of
its capacity.
Eligibility:
200 percent of the federal poverty guidelines. They must be on PIPP plus or sign
up for PIPP Plus or another payment plan.
Income
Proof:
Proof of income must be provided. Can include payroll stubs, statements from
employers, public assistance payment histories, tax forms, or benefit letters from
Social Security, Workers ‘Compensation or Unemployment Compensation.
Location:
Customers seeking assistance may be seen at 719 S. Main St. in Dayton, at the
Dayton Job Center and at the agency’s satellite office at 1912 Needmore Road.
PIPP
Customers must have a household income at or below 150 percent of the
Eligibility:
federal poverty guidelines.
Contact:
Customers may call 1-866-504-7379 to make an appointment. The CAP office at
19 S. Main St. will accept a limited number of walk-in customers.
Walk-in customers may line up outside the CAP office beginning at 8 a.m. only to
be seen as a walk-in. Walk-in does not guarantee client will be seen.
DAYTON OHIO HABITAT FOR HUMANITY, INC.
115 W. Riverview Ave.
Dayton, OH 45405
(937) 586-0860 x21
8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Monday-Friday)
www.daytonhabitat.org
Provides affordable homeownership opportunities for qualified low-income families in
Montgomery County
Partner families invest hundreds of hours of their own labor –“sweat equity”- into building their
own houses and houses of others and attending homeownership classes
Families pay a down payment and a monthly mortgage payment, taxes and insurance to Habitat
Direct services include personal contact from staff and volunteers, home visits, one-on-one
mentors, educational classes, sweat equity management, and ongoing communication and nurturing
to assure families’ success as a mortgage-paying homeowner and self-sufficient citizen of the
community
Page 24 of 45
DIVERSION TEAM (Children Services Division of Montgomery County Job & Family
Services)
3304 North Main Street
Dayton, OH 45405
(937) 276-7490
8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.mcohio.org/services/childrens_services/index.html
Provides services when a predicament could cause removal of children from the home. No self-referrals are
accepted. Parent is required to have income as well as the ability to maintain. An agency that is involved
with the family can make the referral to the Diversion Team.
GREATER DAYTON PREMIER MANAGEMENT (formerly Dayton Metro Housing)
400 Wayne Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45410
Phone: 937-910-7500 TDD Number 937-910-7570
8:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. (Monday-Friday)
www.gdpm.org
GDPM provides low income housing to eligible individuals, families and elderly applicants.
Applications are accepted at orientation sessions which are held on Monday and Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. only
and Wednesday and Thursday at 8:30 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. Applicants must attend an orientation session in
order to apply. Please arrive at least 30 minutes early to complete paperwork.
There are a limited number of applicants that can be accepted daily. All adults on the application must be
present for the orientation/application appointment. All applicants must bring the following to apply:
Verification of date of birth for all family members (birth certificates);
Social Security cards for all family members
Picture identification for all family members age 18 and older.
NOTE: In the future, clients will have the ability to apply on line through our website.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES
Prevention, Retention and Contingency (PRC)
1111 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45422 (General Mailing Zip - 45408)
(937) 225-6347
www.mcohio.org/services/jobandfamily/services/index.html
PRC funds can be used for the following needs:
 Shelter and clothing
 Domestic violence, housing relocation and disaster assistance
 Transportation (including auto repair expenses or down payment on an automobile)
 Training, employment and work support
Page 25 of 45
Who is eligible?
 Needy families with a minor child
 An individual who is pregnant
 A non-custodial parent of a minor child if the non-custodial parent lives in Ohio and does not live
in the same household as the minor child
Documentation Needed: Applicants should bring the following documents to the interview when applying:
 Verification of the immediate need
o A shut-off notice
o Foreclosure
o Eviction, etc.
 Identification
 Verification of income
Caseworkers will provide applicants with a list of needed documents.
How to Apply: No appointment is necessary. However, a face-to-face interview at MCDJFS offices in the
Job Center is required. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information,
please call 937-225-6347.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY VETERANS SERVICE COMMISSION
Your Local Military Benefits Connection
627 Edwin C. Moses Boulevard, 4th Floor
East Medical Plaza
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 225-4801
Website: www.mcvsc.org
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. (Monday thru Friday)
We can provide emergency financial assistance to veterans who qualify and must be a
(Montgomery County resident) for: mortgage, rent, food, and utilities.
We have state certified service officers that can assist with filing for or getting an increase with the
following VA benefits: compensation, pension, widows’ pension, education, home loan certificate
of eligibility, Ohio bonus, discharge upgrades, obtaining copies of the military discharge (DD214).
THE MUSTARD SEED FOUNDATION, INC.
4880 Denlinger Rd.
Trotwood, Ohio 45426
(9370 529-4010
www.themustardseedfoundationofdayton.org
The Residential Parenting Facility is the only 10-bedroom housing program for teen custodial mothers and
their children in Montgomery County. The program serves teen mothers ages 13-18, who are currently in
state or county custody or who have been referred by other local service agencies.
Page 26 of 45
The program offers teen mothers and their children housing, basic necessities, adult supervision and
guidance, as well as the supportive services they need to become healthy, strong and self-sufficient families.
Teen mothers create and implement self-sufficiency plans to aid them in breaking the cycle of poverty and
future dependency on public assistance. Through supportive services and a nurturing environment, teen
mothers develop the life skills and knowledge they need to prepare them for more independent living
situations.
While in the program, teen’s progress toward high school graduation, achieving their GED, setting
advanced educational goals or otherwise preparing for the job market. They also receive counseling and
education to delay further childbearing as they work toward greater maturity and stability as well as
parenting classes to teach them how to be responsible and caring parents. Additionally, other supportive
services are offered such as, financial planning and career readiness classes.
HOMELESSNESS PREVENTION AND REHOUSING
The following agencies provide services to prevent individuals and families from becoming homeless or to
assist the homeless in moving to stable housing:
HOMEFULL PREVENTION
Homefull assists low-income residents who are at risk of becoming homeless with flexible
financial assistance and limited case management. Prevention services include eviction prevention,
deposit and/or first month’s rent assistance, mediation for landlord tenant disputes, linkage to legal
services, and referrals to community-based programs. Applicants must call Homefull to pre-screen
for eligibility. The applicant must:
Be at least 18 years of age
Have no financial resources or family/social support that could prevent homelessness
Must be the person responsible for the debt
Must be able to resume payments following the provision of assistance
Resource Hotline 937-222-1981
Assistance Questionnaire http://homefull.org/homefull-assistance-questionnaire/
When an individual or family is homeless, they can seek assistance through the
four gateway shelters:
Daybreak for youth 10 to 18 years of age
St. Vincent for women and families
Gettysburg Gateway for men
YWCA for victims of domestic violence
These agencies comprise what is called the ‘front door”. Once an individual or family enters one of these
shelters, they are provided with an assessment which helps determine their particular needs and they can
then be referred to agencies for additional services best suited to move them toward permanent housing,
independence and economic self-sufficiency.
Page 27 of 45
DAYBREAK
605 South Patterson Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 395-4600 General Calls
(937) 461-1000 Crisis Hotline
24 hours/day; 7 days/week
www.daybreakdayton.org
Daybreak offers a 16-bed emergency shelter, open 24/7 for youth from 10-18 years of age where safety,
shelter, food, clothing and counseling are provided.
GETTYSBURG GATEWAY FOR MEN
1921 S. Gettysburg Ave.
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 222-7350
Intake 24/7 365 days a year
Registration before 7:00 p.m.
Provides 24-hour shelter for homeless single men. 3 meals per day are served. Case management services
are provided by Homefull.
ST. VINCENT DE PAUL GATEWAY SHELTER FOR WOMEN AND FAMILIES
120 West Apple Street
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 461-7837
Intake: 24/7
Walk-in or phone registration
www.stvincentdayton.org
Provides 24-hour shelter for homeless single women and families. 3 meals per day are served. Case
management services are provided by Homefull.
YWCA DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SHELTER AND HOUSING NETWORK
Business Address:
141 West Third Street
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 222-6333 (Crisis), (937) 222-8946 (Business)
(937) 222-SAFE (7233) Domestic Violence Hotline
No fees for shelter services - 24 hours/day
www.ywca.org/site/pp.asp?c=elLVJiP8H&b=59159
Provides protective temporary emergency shelter for women and their children in life-threatening situations.
Offers case management and referrals for legal and human services. Also, provides a support group for
women in the community and shelter clients who have left battering relationships.
Provides 30-60 day emergency housing for women, including meals, case management, basic skills and
other supportive services. Services begin at age 18.
Page 28 of 45
For individuals and families who are living on the street, in their cars or in other
places not meant for human habitation the following services are available:
PATH OUTREACH – MIAMI VALLEY HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES
907 W. Fifth St., Suite 300
Dayton, OH 45402
PATH Outreach 937-559-2263
www.mvho.net
PATH staff is available upon request.
PATH staff members go where homeless individuals stay, establishing trusting relationships with them and
then help them to start planning for their futures. Outreach is the first step toward the achievement of
recovery, housing and self-determination. Once a working relationship has been established, PATH staff
members help their client to find appropriate housing and submit housing applications.
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION’S HEALTH CARE FOR HOMELESS
VETERANS (HCHV)
Dayton VA Medical Center
4100 West Third Street
Dayton, OH 45428
(937) 268-6511 x1200
VA’s National Call Center for Homeless Veterans at 1-877-4AID-VET (1-877-424-3838)
www.dayton.va.gov
This program offers outreach, exams, treatment, referrals, and case management to Veterans who are
homeless and dealing with mental health issues, including substance use.
Following is a list of organizations that provide housing assistance for specific
populations; however, they may only be accessed through the shelters by referral
or as noted.
AIDS RESOURCE CENTER OHIO
15 West Fourth Street, Suite 200
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 461-2437 (Ohio HIV/STD Hotline); 800-332-2437
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday) Walk-ins welcome
www.arcohio.org
Provides funds and case management for the provision of health-related services for persons with
AIDS/HIV+. Emergency assistance can be accessed to pay for housing.
Page 29 of 45
DAYBREAK
605 South Patterson Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 395-4600 General Calls
(937) 461-1000 Crisis Hotline
24 hours/day; 7 days/week
www.daybreakdayton.org
Daybreak focuses on providing services for homeless, at-risk, and troubled youth ages 10 to 21 in the
Dayton region. Daybreak serves youth and young adults in crisis through three core programs:
1) Offers the region’s only housing program designed to move homeless youth ages 18 to 21 out of
homelessness, poverty, under-education, and crisis and into housing, financial independence,
educational achievement, and self-sufficiency.
2) Street outreach provides youth who are couch-hopping or living on the streets with food,
necessities, and advice while helping them find a safe place to live.
Daybreak also offers a 24 hour crisis hotline, counseling and case management, life skills education and
referrals to community resources.
MERCY MANOR, INC.
25 Grosvenor Avenue
Dayton, OH 45417
(937)268-0282
www.mercymanordayton.com
Provides up to 6 months of transitional housing for homeless women with histories of incarceration,
substance abuse, and/or physical abuse. Services are provided in a safe, spiritual environment. All
residents are expected to attend recovery meetings, become employed, attain permanent housing and reach
individual goals. Mercy Manor offers life skills development, counseling and makes referrals to
community resources, as needed.
MIAMI VALLEY HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES (MVHO)
P.O. Box 28308
Dayton, OH 45428
(937) 263-4449
8:30 a.m. – 4:30 a.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.mvho.net
Manages the Shelter Plus Care Program (S+C), HUD 811, and McKinney I & II projects. Deposits and
monthly rent subsidies are offered to consumers who pay 30% of their adjusted household income.
S+C provides permanent rental subsidies for formerly homeless persons with disabilities. Iowa Avenue
facility provides permanent housing support, single room occupancy housing, and 24 hour services.
Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness (PATH) Program consist of outreach and
distribution of basic human need items and referrals.
Page 30 of 45
HOLT STREET MIRACLE CENTER
420 Holt Street
Dayton, OH 45402
937-222-7420
Email: [email protected]
VA REFERRALS ONLY
Holt Street Miracle Center provides temporary housing for veterans, particularly those needing recovery
support. Referrals must come from the Veterans Administration (VA).
HOMEFULL
1133 S. Edwin C. Moses Blvd., Suite 306
Dayton, OH 45417
937-293-1945
937-293-8150 (fax)
Resource Line: 937-222-1981
Office hours: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
www.homefull.org
Homefull works to end homelessness by providing housing, services, advocacy, and education. Through an
intensive service coordination approach, Homefull provides case management assistance to people living in
Gateway Shelters, Permanent Supported Housing, and aftercare when appropriate.
THE LINDA VISTA INC.
1011 Linda Vista Ave., Suite 5
Dayton, OH 45405
937-277-9663
937-279-0508 fax
www.lindavistaproject.org
Linda Vista provides housing and case management for homeless women who have the ultimate goal of
self-sufficiency. Residents live in a fully furnished apartment for up to two years.
PLACES, Inc.
11 W. Monument Ave., 7th Floor
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 461-4300
(937) 461-0443 fax
8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. (Monday-Friday)
www.placesinc.org
With dignity, respect and compassion, PLACES cares for adults diagnosed with mental health disorders,
including the homeless, by providing housing and the supportive services they need to live happier,
healthier, more independent lives. For specific admission criteria and other information please visit
PLACES website.
Page 31 of 45
RED CROSS FAMILY LIVING CENTER
829 South Gettysburg Avenue
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 279-6034
8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.dac.redcross.org/red-cross-family-living-center
The Red Cross Family Living Center (RCFLC) has four on-site programs and one follow up
service in the community.
All homeless families and individuals need to seek assistance for shelter or permanent Supportive
Housing (PSH) through the St. Vincent Gateway Shelters. If the scoring system screens the family
for one of our programs the family will be referred to us. Call 461-7837 to contact the Gateway
Shelter for families.

Programmatic shelter to homeless families.
o Provides individual furnished units to each family. Services include case
management, referrals, relocation assistance, and crisis management. Families can
stay for up to 30 days; extensions are possible if a case requires it.

Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) for formerly homeless families with a diagnosed
disability.
o Disabilities include mental health, former drug or alcohol abuse, HIV/AIDS. Each
family is screened by Premier Management (formerly DMHA) for Section 8
eligibility and signs a lease with RCFLC. Families receive case management
services and subsidized housing as long as the family remains eligible and is in
need of intensive services.

Respite Care in partnership with Samaritan Clinic.
o Services homeless families or individuals where a traditional shelter setting is not
appropriate based on a medical diagnosis or condition.

After school program
o Tutoring services for any eligible RCFLC student in grades K-8th in partnership
with Dayton Public Schools McKinney Vento Program.

Supportive Housing Program (SHP)
o SHP provides follow up services to any RCFLC family that moves from shelter into
housing in the community for a minimum of 6 months.
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VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA OF GREATER OHIO
4100 W. 3rd, bldg. 400
Dayton, OH 45428
(937)253-7042
The Volunteers of America Veterans Resource Center offers housing and employment services for
homeless veterans. The Veterans Transitional Housing Program provides stable housing and case
management to veterans as they work to gain housing of their own. The Employment Program offers
homeless veterans job search, interviewing and job retention support. The programs assist homeless
veterans in their journey to regain housing, employment and independence.
LEGAL
DAYTON MEDIATION CENTER
371 W. 2nd Street, 3rd Floor
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 333-2345
(937) 333-2366 (fax)
Website: www.daytonmediationcenter.org
Hours of Operation: Monday – Friday, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Saturday 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Provides the conflict management process of mediation for individuals, families, groups,
organizations, business, government agencies, social service organizations, employees and
management, landlord and tenants, schools, universities/colleges and families making decisions on
elder care, law enforcement agencies and courts, married couples, and people in long-term
committed relationships.
Provides restorative justice processes including community impact panels, victim-offender dialogue
processes, and large and small group dialogue and facilitation processes.
Provides customized conflict consultation and team-building interventions for organizations,
businesses, churches, community groups, and local government governing bodies.
Provides customized conflict management systems design for workplaces, schools/universities, and
organizations looking to integrate alternative methods for resolving conflicts within their
organizations.
Provides customized conflict management training, workshops, and presentations to assist
individuals and groups learn about conflict and how to manage it constructively.
Provides “Conflict Coaching” services to assist individuals learn to manage interpersonal conflict
more effectively.
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LEGAL AID OF WESTERN OHIO, INC. (LAWO)
Advocates for Basic Legal Equality Inc. (ABLE)
130 W. Second St., Suite 700 East and West
Dayton, OH 45402
LAWO (937) 228-8088
ABLE (937) 228-8104
(888) 534-1432 (new applicants for LAWO or ABLE)
Both offices: 9:00 a.m. – 2 p.m. Monday – Friday
www.legalaidline.org or www.ablelaw.org
LAWO and ABLE are non-profit regional law firms that provide legal assistance in civil (non-criminal)
matters to eligible low-income individuals and groups. LAWO provides a full range of legal services
including legal advice, negotiation, litigation, and community education. ABLE advocates for systemic
change in the area of civil rights and poverty law, seeking to change policy, laws, and regulations at local
and state levels.
LAWO and ABLE serve cases including but not limited to: housing, including tenant rights and
homeownership; family law, including domestic violence, divorce, and rights of parents and children,
Social Security and public benefits; consumer law, including bankruptcy and fair debt collection; elder law,
including discrimination, healthcare and wills; wages and benefits, welfare, and safety of immigrant
workers. In addition, each program has specialized programs and projects.
DISABILITY RIGHTS OHIO (FORMERLY OHIO LEGAL RIGHTS SERVICE)
50 W. Broad Street, Suite 1400
Columbus, OH 43215-5923
614-466-7264 or 800-282-9181
TTY 614-728-2553 or 800-858-3542
Intake hours: 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.disabilityrightsohio.org
DRO is a private non-profit that advocates for the human, civil and legal rights of people with
disabilities
DRO provides legal advocacy and rights protection to a wide range of people with disabilities,
including assisting individuals with problems such as abuse, neglect, discrimination, access to
assistive technology, special education, housing, employment, community integration, voting and
rights protection issues with the juvenile and criminal justice systems.
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MENTAL HEALTH / ALCOHOL AND DRUG ADDICTION SERVICES
AL-ANON / ALATEEN FAMILY GROUPS
P.O. Box 282
Dayton, OH 45401
(937) 427-5439
8:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. - 24 hour answering service
www.al-anondaytonoh.org
Offers a self-help recovery program for families and friends of alcoholics, whether or not the alcoholic
seeks help or recognizes the existence of a drinking problem. Members give and receive comfort and
understanding through a mutual exchange of experiences, strength, and hope. Anonymity is maintained.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
120 West Second Street, #211
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 222-2211
9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Saturday
This number also serves as the hotline, available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
www.aadaytononline.org
Alcoholics Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who share with each other their experience,
strength and hope that they can solve their common problem and help others to recover from alcoholism.
CENTER FOR ALCOHOLISM & DRUG ADDICTION SERVICES (CADAS)
One Elizabeth Place
Southeast, 3rd Floor
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 461-5223
CrisisCare Hotline - (937) 224-4646
Website: www.phdmc.org
Outpatient:
8:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. (Monday – Wed)
8:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Thursday and Friday)
Non-Intensive and Intensive Outpatient treatment consist of a 16 week program that includes
individual and group counseling, education and skills building.
CADAS also provides a substance abuse prevention program for parents of pre-school children.
Clients generally are limited to Montgomery County residents but some circumstances may waive
this condition.
Potential clients are assessed and referred by CrisisCare. Please call (937) 224-4646 to schedule an
appointment for assessment.
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CRISISCARE
Elizabeth Place, NW Bldg., 1st Floor
601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd.
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 224-4646
www.sbhihelp.org
The following services are available at Samaritan Behavioral-CrisisCare:
24/7 Walk-in Crisis Intervention/Counseling
24/7 Telephone Hotline/Warmline
24/7 Pre-hospital Screening
Scheduled Comprehensive Mental Health/Alcohol and other Drug (AoD) Diagnostic Assessments
Scheduled Psychiatric Medication/Assessments
DAY-MONT BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE, Inc.
1520 Germantown Street
Dayton, OH 45417
(937) 222-8111
(937) 222-3019 (Fax)
Ohio Relay TDY Services
Website: www.daymont.org
Hours:
Fee:
1-800-750-0750
Monday & Friday
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday
8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Sliding fee scale and third party payment
Services:
Outpatient psychiatric/counseling services for those suffering from mental health and substance
abuse.
Case management, diagnostic assessment, individual, family, group sessions, psychotherapy as well
as pharmacology services. Also services for children and youth.
For more information call our Intake Department at 937-824-3308.
EASTWAY BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE
600 Wayne Avenue
Dayton, OH 45410
(937) 496-2000
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday by appointment)
Fees are based on a sliding scale and depend on the program
4950 Northcutt Place
Dayton, OH 45414
(937) 496-2020
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday by appointment)
Fees are based on a sliding scale and depend on the program
www.eastway.org
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Offers mental health, substance abuse, housing, employment, and educational services. Serves adults,
children, and families throughout Montgomery County and beyond. Offers competency and sanity
evaluations, expert testimony, and the forensic monitoring of probationers and parolees for adults involved
with the criminal justice system.
FAMILY SERVICE ASSOCIATION
Main Office Location:
2211 Arbor Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45439
Phone: (937) 222-9481 (Voice/TTY); Video Phone: (866) 970-3396; Fax: (937) 222-3710
8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday and Friday); 8:30 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. (Tuesday thru Thursday)
Other hours by appointment
Fees – third party, sliding fee scale, Medicare, Medicaid
Website: www.fsadayton.org
Email: [email protected]
Satellite Office Locations:
Neighborhood Organizing Office
1320 E. Fifth Street (Sunrise Center)
Dayton, OH 45402
Phone: (937) 222-9481
Piqua Office Location
326 N. Main Street
Piqua, OH 45356
Phone: (937) 773-6153
Established in 1896, Family Services is a local non-profit organization dedicated to designing programs to
meet the needs of Miami Valley residents, families and communities through a network of programs and
services including family and mental health counseling, parenting and anger management classes.
Services include:

VOCA Services (Victims of Crime Act) offer counseling, education, victim rights information,
referral and advocacy for crime victims;

SCAN (Stop Child Abuse Now) promotes responsible parenting, empowers survivors of abuse
and generates awareness of child abuse;

Friends Connection provides in-home assessment, case management, counseling, and education
to reduce depression, improve access to services for aging adults/seniors;

Closing the Circle is a school/community-based prevention program for children, parents and
teachers protecting against school failure, delinquency and drug abuse;

August Project is a 17 week structured group process to hold domestic violence batterers
responsible for their actions and change thoughts, attitudes and behaviors;

Families Safe Together is a uniquely different program of intervention, assessment, safety
planning and therapy for families experiencing domestic violence;

Community/Neighborhood Development assists residents in developing and implementing
shared vision, utilizing resources and building a sense of community;
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NOVA BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, INC.
732 Beckman Street
Dayton, OH 45410
(937) 253-1680
24 hours/day and vary depending on the program
Fees are based on a sliding scale and depend on the program
www.novabh.org
Provides consultation on drug abuse to businesses and industries. Offers prevention and awareness services
to the community via speakers and literature.
Offers residential, drug-free, treatment using the best-practice model CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy),
motivational interviewing, and motivational enhancement. Length of stay is based on individual needs.
Program includes counseling, vocational rehabilitation, and activities therapy. Also offers a dual diagnosis
residential treatment program adapted to the needs of substance abusing mentally ill persons.
Offers drug dependency evaluation, drug-free counseling, urine surveillance, psychological testing and
evaluation, and counseling (individual, group, and family) regarding chemical abuse and related issues.
PROJECT CURE INC.
1800 N. James H. McGee Blvd.
Dayton, Ohio 45417
(937) 262-3500
(937) 262-3523
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.; Monday – Friday
www.projectcureinc.org
PROJECT CURE Prevention Services
24 N. Jefferson St.
Dayton, Ohio 45402
(937) 222-5683
8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Evening activities on Tuesday/Thursday
Project Cure Inc. is a chemical dependency treatment center dedicated to treating persons with Drug and
Alcohol Addiction. We specialize in the treatment of Opiate Dependence utilizing Medication Assisted
Treatment with Methadone. The integration of counseling and medical interventions helps to prevent
withdrawal and promote recovery. Urine drug screening is also utilized to monitor progress and the
presence of drug use. Clients are referred after an initial assessment at CrisisCare (224-4646).
Outpatient Counseling Services: Group and individual counseling are offered to assist the consumer in
developing recovery skills and learning how to live a sober and healthy lifestyle. Services are offered
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Tuesday hours are from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Project W.I.L.L.: This is a women’s intensive outpatient program specializing in women’s issues and
assisting women who need a higher level of care and attention. This program meets for 9 hours of group
weekly and also provides individual counseling focusing on the needs of women in recovery to propel
women into a lasting lifestyle.
Residential Treatment: Project Cure has an agreement with Nova Behavioral Health to provide
residential treatment services to clients needing medication assisted treatment. Through this collaborative
agreement, clients receive residential care in a controlled environment while benefitting from the
medication at Project Cure to control physical withdrawal symptoms related to drug use.
Medication Assisted Treatment: Methadone is an opiate agonist treatment that is provided to those having
dependence on opiate medications and heroin. The main purpose is to stop the painful effects of withdrawal
and to assist in preventing physical cravings. As the client progresses in their treatment, in most cases, a
Page 38 of 45
plan is developed with the physician slowly decreasing the amount of medication so the patient experiences
minimal discomfort.
Prevention Services: Provides delinquency prevention services to pre-delinquent/delinquent youths and
their families living in the Greater Dayton area. Also offers the youth, and their family, support and
guidance in the areas of: juvenile diversion counseling, school drop-out prevention, parent education, and
church referrals.
SALVATION ARMY ADULT REHABILITATION
913 South Patterson Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 461-2769 x112
Applications Provided/Received:
Monday – Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation offers a six to nine month residential rehabilitation program for drug
and/or alcohol abusers.
The program is open to men and women ages 18 and over, who have been drug free at least 24 hours, are
not intoxicated, and are willing to access the whole program offered, which includes: a residential program,
work therapy assignment and Christian-based spiritual program. The program also addresses recovery and
personal growth issues. Clothing, linens, laundry, meals, recreation activities, referrals for health issues,
recovery materials, and a safe and drug-free environment are provided.
Individuals receiving any type of income are required to pay room and board (up to 75% of the income or
$120 per week). Those who do not have an income are still strongly encouraged to apply.
Any person who would like to apply should call 937-461-2769 x112 for an application and to set up an
appointment for a phone or on-site interview.
SAMARITAN BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, INC.
601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd.
Dayton, Ohio 45417
Administration, Child, Youth, and Adult Counseling Services
Office:
937-734-8333
Fax:
937-734-8336
CrisisCare:
937- 224-4646
Website:
www.sbhihelp.org
Young Children’s Assessment and Treatment Services (YCATS)
Offers early intervention, assessment, and treatment to children ages birth through kindergarten who are
experiencing behavioral health problems such as attachment disorders, depression, abuse/neglect issues, and
attention deficit/hyperactivity disorders.
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Youth Resources
Offers assessment and treatment services to children ages 5-17 experiencing behavioral health problems
such as depression and anxiety, anger outbursts, oppositional and defiant behavior, attention
deficit/hyperactivity disorders, abuse/trauma issues, and adjustments to Foster Homes.
Samaritan Counseling Alternatives (SCA)
Offers assessment and treatment services to individuals ages 18 years through older adults. Counseling for
adults experiencing mental health problems such as depression and anxiety, anger and family/relationship
problems, stress, work-related issues, psychiatric disorders, grief and loss, and personal/emotional
problems.
SOUTH COMMUNITY INC.
3095 Kettering Boulevard
Dayton, Ohio 45439
(937) 293-8300
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday through Friday)
Fees vary depending on the program
www.southcommunity.com
Services include, but are not limited to:
Individual, family and group counseling for children and adults
Community psychiatric support for children and adults
School-based mental health services
Youth Partial Hospitalization
Treatment Foster care for children
Integrated Dual Disordered Treatment (IDDT) for adults
Assertive Case Management Team (ACT) for adults
Community Intervention Team specifically serving persons with serious and persistent mental
illness and physical disorders
SUICIDE PREVENTION CENTER, Inc.
P. O. Box 1393
Dayton, OH 45401-1393
(937) 229-7777 (24-Hour Hotline)
(937) 226-0818 (Business Line)
www.suicidepreventioncenter.tk
Provides a 24-hour crisis hotline for all individuals who are in crisis, feeling suicidal, depressed,
overwhelmed, and/or turning to self-destructive behavior. Services also include support groups, a school
prevention program, and suicide prevention training workshops.
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URBAN MINORITY ALCOHOL & DRUG ADDICTION OUTREACH PROGRAM
(UMADAOP)
One Elizabeth Place
West Pavilion, 4th Floor, Suite 400
Dayton, OH 45408
(937) 276-2176
8:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.umadaops.com/dayton.htm
Offers prevention and outreach programs targeting the African-American community in Montgomery
County. Offers training for professionals in effective treatment and intervention strategies. Provides
training on AIDS education, violence prevention, teen pregnancy prevention, elder care, common-sense
parenting, and Circle for Reentry Ohio programs.
Youth Groups: Tuesdays and Thursdays
Wednesday
Ponitz High School)
UMADAOP
4:00 pm. – 6:00
3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
US DEPARTMENT OF VETERAN AFFAIRS MEDICAL CENTER
4100 West Third Street
Dayton, OH 45428
(937) 268-6511
8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.dayton.va.gov
Provides residential treatment for veterans with chronic medical and/or psychiatric diagnoses. Length of
stay is negotiable. The treatment plan is tailored to help individuals function as independently as possible.
Call 268-6511, ext. 2860 for more information. Must be an honorably discharged veteran.
Provides individual counseling, substance abuse counseling, and assists veterans with adjustment problems.
Assists veterans in obtaining jobs, securing housing, and re-adjusting to being in the workforce and the
community.
Provides a residential rehabilitation treatment program for veterans suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD). Provides diagnostic assessment and evaluation of veterans exposed to combat trauma
and war-zone related stress. Veterans will participate in a wide range of therapeutic treatment and
pharmacologic intervention where appropriate. Call 268-6511, ext. 1145 for more information.
Offers outpatient and 28-day inpatient treatment for substance abuse, including follow-up outpatient care.
Also offers support services for families of abusers, informational workshops for families and friends,
couples, groups, individual, and marital counseling. Call 268-6511, ext. 1071 or 262-2188 for more
information.
Offers classes open to the public. Topics include: information on the nicotine patch (nicotine patches
provided to veterans only), stress management, avoiding weight gain, relapse prevention, and relaxation
techniques. Call for meeting information.
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WOMANLINE COUNSELING CENTER
301 East Sixth Street
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 223-3446
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays)
9:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. (Wednesdays)
www.womanlinedayton.org
Counseling Program. Provides professional mental health counseling in the form of brief treatment or longterm counseling for women, specializing in all women's issues, such as: depression, anxiety, relationship
issues, self-esteem, coping skills, and sexual abuse recovery treatment. Fees based on sliding scale.
Accepts Medicaid and some insurance plans.
WOMEN’S RECOVERY CENTER
515 Martin Drive
Xenia, OH 45385
(937) 352-2900
24 hours/day
Fees are based on third party sliding scale
www.khnetwork.org/wrc
Provides non-medical residential and outpatient treatment for alcohol, tobacco and other drug dependent
women. Serves women ages 18 and older from throughout the Miami Valley. Pregnant women and women
with small children are welcome. Childcare services are available on site. Program length is based on need
(approximately 30-90 days). Substance abuse counseling education and case management are provided.
MISCELLANEOUS
COMMUNITY SERVICES FOR THE DEAF (A Program of Family Service Association)
Main Office Location:
2211 Arbor Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45439
Phone: (937) 222-9481 (Voice/TTY); TDD: (937) 222-7921;
Video Phone: (866) 970-3396; Fax: (937) 222-3710
24 Hour Interpreting Needs: (937) 640-8032
Hours: 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday thru Friday);
Walk-in Hours: Wednesday 1:00 -3:30 PM
Other hours by appointment
Fees – third party, sliding fee scale, Medicaid
Website:
www.fsadayton.org/services-for-the-deaf
Email: [email protected]
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Satellite Office Location:
Piqua Office Location
326 N. Main Street
Piqua, OH 45356
Phone: (937) 773-6153 – for appointment
For more than 35 years, Community Services for the Deaf has been providing services for Deaf and Hardof-Hearing individuals and families in the Miami Valley. Services include:











Advocacy – services to support access to services and enforcement of rights;
Interpreting - utilizing American Sign Language, SEE, Deaf-Blind and oral interpretation for
personal and professional appointments (doctor visits, classrooms);
C-Print Captioning – visual transcription service that supports complete involvement and access to
the environment and setting (classroom lecture);
In-Service Training – Provides information and training regarding community resources, rights and
responsibilities for working with the Deaf and hard-of-hearing;
Case Management – planning, support and advocacy available for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing;
Community Support – computers and other equipment are available for clients/community to utilize
during regular office hours;
Counseling/Mental Health Services – Counseling, skills development, advocacy and support for
individuals and families within the office, home and community;
American Sign Language Classes – designed to teach basic ASL skills;
KODA (Kids of Deaf Adults) Camp – summer camping program for children of deaf and hard-ofhearing adults that supports peer interaction and leadership development;
Deaf Teen Institute – program to encourage and build leadership for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing
teens;
DeafEND Prevention Programs - Alcohol and other drug prevention education program for Deaf
and Hard-of-Hearing students in school and community.
KINSHIP NAVIGATOR PROGRAM
907 W. Fifth St., 4th floor
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 775-8245 (Intake)
www.med.wright.edu/chc/
Assists kinship caregivers and their children by making referrals, assisting with application forms, and
accompanying caregivers to community resources as needed. Also provides educational materials.
THE MENTORING COLLABORATIVE
4801 Springfield Street
Riverside, OH 45431
(937) 236-9965
www.mentoringcollaborative.org
The Mentoring Collaborative of Montgomery County’s (MCMC) mission is to coordinate and support
youth mentoring programs in Montgomery County through training, resource development and recruitment.
To help partner agencies create the most successful experiences for their mentors and mentees, we provide a
full resource center that provides tips, advice and the most current best-practice information.
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MCMC supports “best-practice mentoring” by helping agencies be as effective as they can be through
agency training and certification. In 2010, MCMC with the oversight of the Montgomery County
Educational Service Center (MCESC) designed and implemented an MCMC AmeriCorps program with 20
AmeriCorps members, addressing the AmeriCorps priorities of helping children and youth achieve success
in school and prevent them from dropping out before high school graduation. The objective of this new
initiative is to increase the number of at risk youth (mentees) receiving mentoring services in Montgomery
County.
OMBUDSMAN’S OFFICE (Joint Office of Citizen Complaints)
11 W. Monument Ave.
Dayton, OH 45402
(937) 223-4613 or 1-800-395-8627
8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)
www.dayton-ombudsman.org
Investigates complaints from Montgomery County citizens about government agencies and programs.
Provides information about government services, schools, and social services.
Investigates complaints and advocates for residents of long term care facilities, assisted living facilities and
in-home care services. Assists nursing home and group home residents with asserting their rights. Handles
complaints of long-term services provided in home and community settings.
UNITED STATES SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Apply online for retirement, Medicare, disability, and spouse benefits at www.socialsecurity.gov
National number: 1-800-772-1213, 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday, except federal holidays)
Dayton Office
Federal Building
200 West Second Street, Room 209
Dayton, OH 45402
Local phone:
Local hours:
1-888-329-5724
9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. (Monday – Friday, except federal holidays)
*Valid photo ID needed to enter the federal building*
West Dayton Office
4375 Hoover Avenue
Dayton, OH 45417
Local phone:
Local hours:
1-877-895-0038
9:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, except federal holidays
9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Wednesday
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UNITED WAY’S HELPLINK 2-1-1
33 West First Street, Suite 500
Dayton, OH 45402
2-1-1 or (937) 225-3000 or 1-800-91-REACH
24 hours, 365 days a year
Fees vary depending on the program
www.helplink211.org
Provides information and referral services 24 hours a day, 365 days per year. Provides an after-hour
answering service; directory of community services; specialized lists, reports, mailing labels; advocacy;
case consultation program for the faith communities; home foreclosure prevention program; earned income
tax credit program and dislocated worker program. Go to www.helplink211.org to access HelpLink’s
online database.
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