It’s going to be very cold over the next few days in my area and I’d like to buy something for the people who are homeless, particularly ones who won’t be in a shelter.

For budgeting, there is one shelter in my area for adults and one for children/teenagers. I don’t know how many people would not have shelter but in the past, I have planned for 40 people when providing food for people in a shelter.

My budget is about $200 USD; what would be the most useful? thermal blankets? hot food?

Edit: thanks to all who responded. I called the shelter and the most needed items are (1) sleeping bags (2) very warm gloves to prevent frostbite (3) boots

  • Nobody@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    The first thing you need to do is not personalize societal failure as your personal problem. Don’t put too much on yourself.

    If you’re looking to donate, partner with local groups who are making a difference. They’ll know what the local needs are right now. It’s a neverending problem, but certainly more acute right now.

  • chepox@sopuli.xyz
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    9 months ago

    Yo! I am unsure on how to maximize your help but I just want to say people like you are the real heroes. Thank you!

  • cashsky@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    You are a good human.

    I have heard clean dry socks and shoes are a huge necessity since your extremities get cold the fastest, especially if it’s expected to snow or rain.

    • pineapple_pizza@lemmy.dexlit.xyz
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      9 months ago

      +1 I bought new shoes and decided to give my old ones away on the street. Wasn’t hard, met some nice and appreciative people. Just watch out for people that obviously aren’t your size, they’ll just resell

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    9 months ago

    Thrift store blankets, gloves, and coats? Definitely take them home and wash them first.

    If you can get some MREs (meals ready-to-eat), those might be a good option for hot food you can give out. That way the meals are hot when they want them.

    Whatever you end up doing, I applaud your efforts.

    Edit: Yes, donating to a local shelter is nice, but OP specifically said they wanted to help those who could not take make it to a shelter.

    • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Better than MREs is to donate to an active soup kitchen. They will use the cost of the MREs to make way more hot meals overall.

      Most will also take socks, sleeping bags, toiletries, etc, but cash is likely the most useful. They know what they need the most. Dont be afraid to donate the rest, but cash is king.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        Every homeless person I’ve asked why they aren’t at Jesus Saves (nickname of a shelter around here) getting warm and getting food, they tell me they’re banned from there.

        The ones outside still are the ones who for whatever reason aren’t getting helped by those orgs. Maybe they caused trouble, maybe something else. But giving to those orgs is going to miss some people, and the people it’s going to miss are the ones you see outside in this cold.

  • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    How cold is “very cold”? I’m in Canada and right now it’s -35C outside my house, approaching -50 with wind chill. If I was out there right now my main prep would be “holy shit get to any sort of shelter, outdoors is lethal tonight.” I believe the city leaves the various transit centers open for people to bunk down in overnight under conditions like this.

    Failing that, my first priority would probably be a wool blanket. Wool blankets are great at insulation, they work even when wet, and they can be folded up fairly compactly and worn as a shawl or cloak if a little mobility is needed. Though under tonight’s conditions I wouldn’t be mobile, I would have found the most sheltered place I could immediately reach and rolled up in the blanket in hopes I would actually wake up in the morning.

    Cheapest I’d expect to find a good wool blanket for would be something like these $30 ones, so that’s 6 or 7 blankets on your budget. Not too bad I suppose. Maybe there are cheaper places you could get some in bulk?

    If I had sufficient blanket that I’m expecting to survive, my next concern would be frostbite taking my fingers, toes, or ears. So good warm mittens (for survival purposes in these conditions I’d prefer mittens over gloves), thick wool socks, and a hat might be good. Boots would be expensive and hard to ensure the right size for if you’re giving this stuff out to random strangers, hopefully their footwear is loose enough that the thick wool socks will fit. I’ve always liked trapper hats, the chin strap keeps the ears and cheeks protected and ensures I don’t lose it to a strong gust of wind or other circumstances. The nose would be left unprotected, so perhaps a scarf would be good to add to that - a scarf is like a little mini blanket and might be versatile if they need to wrap it around some other part of themselves for emergency cold protection.

    This is all just off the top of my head, mind you. I’ve dealt with Canadian winters all my life but I’ve fortunately never had to deal with them as a homeless person, so I could easily be missing something.

    Perhaps you could call up a homeless shelter and ask whoever’s running it for advice? I’m sure they’d have more direct experience.

    • Pat12@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      Wow, that is insanely cold. I’m glad there is shelter for the people in your city.

      Thanks for your message - really appreciate the links as well. It will be -13 feeling like -23 with the windchill over the next few days. Here it will often be wet and cold rather than soft snow and cold so there is definitely a hypothermia/frostbite concern. I’ll call up the shelters in the morning and see what would be most helpful; i will pick up some wool blankets if they have no particular preference.

      • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        If rain and wet snow are a common concern where you are then perhaps you could throw in some dollar store tarpaulins to go with the blankets. They’d be a cheap addition that could help by keeping them and their possessions dry. Even though wool can still insulate when wet it’s certainly not pleasant and it adds a lot of weight.

        The links were meant as illustrative, BTW, not necessarily a recommendation to buy those specific things. I haven’t gone digging around for the best deals (and that would likely depend on your location as well).

  • TheDoctorDonna@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I would take that over to the thrift store and buy as many coats as I could get, or you could take it to a warming shelter and let them use as they need.

    Thank you for being a kind human, I only wish I had the funds to do the same before this cold snap hit.

  • Thorny_Insight@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    First things that comes to mind about staying warm in cold weather is wool instead of synthetics/cotton and mittens rather than gloves.

    • greedytacothief@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Why not synthetics? Sure they smell worse than wool, but a synthetic fleece is very warm and will stay warm even when wet, and will dry faster than cotton.

  • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    For those who sleep outside and on the ground I’d say buy them insulated sleeping pads. I have a bit of experience camping during very cold temperatures. Insulating oneself from the ground is as essential as a blanket. Thermarest pads are going for as little as $10 on Ebay to $40 new at Dicks.

  • tyrant@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I’m not an expert but I’ve given out blankets and hand warmers before. They were very much appreciated

  • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    I thought about a lot of variants, but I stopped at a gas can, a simple device to make the gas out and a basic tripod to weight a pot over it. If they have it, they can boil water for tea or just clean water, food bought in bulk in a grocery store, to wash themselves.

    It greatly depends on what they have for now. Maybe a tent is in more priority if they don’t have one, or even something to lay on.

  • jamesb5@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    You are a kind person, but as others have said try not to take on this large burden yourself. Do what you’re comfortable with and be satisfied with that. This is an ongoing and largely intractable problem that you cannot solve alone.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Find information about where warming shelters are, and distribute that information. Pass the information along.

    Also obviously if you have any cold weather gear you can spare, that’s helpful.

  • mommykink@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Honestly? Just give the $200 to the shelter to spend on whatever they think they need. As someone who used to volunteer at a no-kill shelter, everybody wants to donate a bag of dog food but no one wants to donate cash. After a certain point, we were throwing away old stock of unopened dog food because we ran out of storage for it.

    Edit: completely misread the part about helping people specifically not in a shelter. My main point still stands though, I think most unhoused people would take the cash over material goods.

        • foggy@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Your edit is still…

          You know we’re not talking about dogs here, right homie?

          And if yes… You don’t really think there are homeless shelters that are… Not “no-kill”, right?

          • mommykink@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            You know we’re not talking about dogs here, right homie?

            Yes, but the point still stands. Everyone loves the grand gesture of walking in and plopping a 20lb bag of chow on the counter or heroically presenting a homeless man on the corner with a brand new The North Face coat with tags on it.

            I’m speaking from an American perspective for this next part, so if OP isn’t from America they can disregard it, but the whole gift-giving ritual (which this is) makes people feel embarrassed for giving cash outright, like “oh, you couldn’t think of anything to get them?” It’s a difficult truth to swallow but the truth is that most community closets, food banks, etc. are more than stocked with the goods themselves. Homeless people in most of the country have at least some access to these basic goods. What they don’t have is money to save for either A) their specific needs that only they know about or B) some sort of safe housing arrangement.

            Same thing I saw when I volunteered at a shelter. Americans love the warm feeling they get when they give someone less successful than them a physical item, but the second you tell them the cash would be more useful they get indignant. It shatters their illusion that they, and they alone, were making some huge expenditure.