Our Story
Hope House Raleigh
In North Carolina alone, over 5,000 babies were born to teen moms in 2024. A single mom with one child in the Triangle area must work over 200 hours per week (there are only 168 hours in a single week) at minimum wage to remain above the federal poverty line. These sobering stats are among the many reasons Hope House Raleigh feels called to help teen moms become self-sufficient. We are eager to change the narrative that the majority of parenting teen moms in the Raleigh area will never earn more than the poverty level.
Nationally, only 50% of teen moms will earn a high school diploma, and only 2% will graduate from college. By affiliating with Hope House National, we will be taking advantage of 23 years of success and a proven model for actually breaking the cycle of poverty. Best of all, we will provide a place where teen moms can focus on their education, parenting skills and identity in Christ while receiving the support they need and giving them a place to belong.
We are excited to announce the launch of Hope House Raleigh, a place where parenting teen moms in our community can earn their GED, move on to college and career, take parenting and healthy relationship classes, and most importantly, learn just how much God loves them and that He has a plan for their life!
At just 18, Sara Landis became a teen mom herself. She knows firsthand the obstacles, judgment and fear a teen mom faces, and the hopeless feeling of having no one to come alongside you. A few years later, she was incredibly blessed to meet and marry an amazing man who loved her for who she was and loved her son as his own. They built a life and a family in Denver, Colorado, and she found her dream job working directly with teen moms at an organization called Hope House Colorado. She absolutely loved building relationships with Hope House’s mamas and being a part of the mission to empower teen moms to become self-sufficient.
When Sara and her family moved to North Carolina seven years ago, they fell in love with their beautiful new community along with their home church, one which is dedicated to serving the community and missions, locally and globally. In working with another local church during the pandemic, Sara was given the opportunity to start an organization that provides housing upon reentry into the community and led that ministry as the executive director for four years. Sara loved her role there, but over the last year she felt God calling her back to serving teen moms. When Sara learned that Hope House National’s mission is to transform the lives of teen moms across the nation, she knew in her heart that this was exactly where God was calling her.
Hope House Colorado: 20 years of transforming lives
For more than 20 years, Hope House Colorado has empowered parenting teen moms to strive for personal and economic self-sufficiency and to understand their significance in God’s sight, resulting in a healthy future for them and for their children.
How Hope House Began
Hope House began when the founders, two former teen moms, recognized that because 67% of teen moms live below the federal poverty line, they are a particularly vulnerable and overlooked population. The challenges these economically disadvantaged teens face were and are still significant: Fewer than 50% of teen moms will graduate from high school; only 2% will ever earn a college degree; and many struggle with mental health and obtaining child care, safe housing and basic needs.
In 1997, there simply wasn’t a place for homeless teen moms and their children. Most group homes were maternity home, and shelters typically only took adult women. It was hard to believe that no one would provide a place for teen moms. Hope House first addressed the issue of homelessness and opened its Residential Program in Arvada in 2003. The house was built with amazing support and a series of miracles – it was truly the house that God built! To date, this program has served more than 100 formerly homeless or at-risk teen moms and their children with a high success rate.
How Hope House Expanded
Just a few years into the Residential Program, Hope House staff were receiving approximately 150 crisis calls annually from teen moms and services providers. Based on the success of the program and the clear need to serve more teen moms and their kids, Hope House launched additional self-sufficiency programs in 2007: GED Program, Parenting and Healthy Relationships Programs, mental health counseling, and life skills classes. In 2013, a temporary (rented) Resource Center located in Westminster provided space for more programming while allowing additional teen moms and children space to live at the house. At this time, the College & Career Program was added, with the launch of the Early Learning Program for the children of teen moms a year later. Additional programs followed including Legal Advocacy, Housing and Economic Navigation, Health & Wellness and more.
In 2017, after a successful $5.4 million capital campaign, a groundbreaking ceremony was held in Arvada (next to the residential house) for a 15,000-square-foot Resource Center. In 2019, the building was completed and programs were moved to this new, debt-free building that has the capacity to serve up to 400 teen moms annually. In 2020, Hope House welcomed its first affiliate, Hope House Northern Colorado in Greeley, Colorado. To date, three affiliate locations have begun the work of empowering teen moms in their area (Greely, CO; Cañon City, CO; and Orange County, CA)!
Over the past few years, Hope House has continued to provide programs in areas that best support the needs of teen moms across the Denver metro-area. In 2022, the Residential Program expanded into a full Housing Support Program, allowing more teen moms who are experiencing homelessness or unsafe housing to receive housing services. The Early Learning Program has become the Early Learning & School Age Program to more comprehensively serve the school-age children of teen moms who need additional social and literacy support.
In 2023, a $6 million capital campaign was completed to build an 11,000-square-foot Early Learning Center adjacent to the Resource Center to provide full-time, licensed child care to the children of teen moms. The center will open in August of 2024, removing a significant barrier for teen moms who can now attend school or work full time while their children develop and grow.
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