In Williston, busy just got busier

Aug 17, 2015

The Salvation Army in Williston, N.D. has been busy providing food, clothing, transportation assistance and other critical services to nearly 1,150 percent more people since the oil boom began, going from about 700 people in 2008 to around 8,000 people in 2014.

Today, the charity has become even busier due to the recent downturn in North Dakota’s oil industry. Suddenly, people are losing their jobs and need The Salvation Army’s help.

Williston Salvation Army exteriorThese people are on top of the population the Williston Salvation Army is accustomed to serving: newbies who arrive from across the country – some on foot – to seek their fortune. Some show up having spent their last dime on a one-way ticket to the oil boomtown; when they don’t find work, they become stranded and homeless. Others do find work, but can’t find a place to live other than a tent or their car.

Still others are lifelong Williston residents who are struggling due to the ever-skyrocketing cost of living.

Now, amid the downturn, there is a new group of people in need of assistance: “They came here and got that good-paying oil job, but now they’ve been laid off – suddenly, within 24 hours, they’ve lost their job and their home,” said Captain Joshua Stansbury, who’s led the Williston Salvation Army with his wife, Captain Rhegan Stansbury (both pictured at top), since 2011. “Another common scenario happens when housing doesn’t accompany a job. People laid off from a good-paying job are locked into an apartment lease for X amount of months, with no way to pay.”

Williston Main StreetAlthough the Williston Salvation Army is not financially equipped to pay a month of somebody’s rent – a $2,200 average, with new-construction projects popping up everywhere (pictured) – the organization is helping in other important ways.

A man named Les provides a good example. He came to Williston from North Carolina in 2010 and spent five years in the oil fields, only to be laid off about six months ago.

Man and dog in Williston“We were homeless there for a while,” said Les (pictured with his dog). “First time I’ve been homeless.”

He’s still looking for full-time employment. Meanwhile, he’s been doing side jobs – house painting, plumbing, yard work – through the network of people he’s met during the past half-decade.

He moved into an apartment in June and is earning barely enough money to pay rent. The Salvation Army is helping fill the gaps by providing him food baskets and gas vouchers once a month, along with as much bread as Les needs, as supplies allow.

“The Salvation Army has been very helpful,” he said.

If Les becomes homeless again, the Army’s transportation assistance program could provide him a one-way ticket to North Carolina, or wherever else he may have a support system in place. At the height of the oil boom, the Williston Salvation Army sometimes spent $8,000 or more per month on bus tickets.

Success amid uncertainty

The Williston Salvation Army has been using the region’s uncertainties to its advantage by finding and creating new opportunities to serve people in need.

New Hope church in WillistonIn February 2014, for example, the Williston Salvation Army and New Hope Wesleyan Church (pictured) created a new cold-weather transitional shelter called Project Heat. The program operates daily from late fall to early spring, when up to 10 homeless men can sleep in the warmth of a modular home leased from a local housing company.

Until Project Heat arrived, the Williston homeless population had no shelter options.

“We are proud of what we’ve accomplished so far,” Stansbury said. “We realize there are more than 10 homeless people in Williston, but that’s 10 fewer people who will have to sleep outside when it’s below zero.”

Additional successes include, but are certainly not limited to:

  • Transforming the Salvation Army Store in Williston into a shopper’s paradise. Store proceeds fund the important programs of the Williston Salvation Army.
  • Creating hot meal programs with help from community partners. One of these programs ended recently, but can continue if and when a new community partner is willing to join the fight against hunger.
  • Adding staff members, including a second social worker and a community engagement director. These staff members are helping the Williston Salvation Army churn out even more success stories – from a homeless man securing his dream job, to providing eyeglasses that changed a man’s life, to helping a cancer patient.

Indeed, the positive momentum building at the Williston Salvation Army will not diminish anytime soon.

Captain Rhegan Stansbury gives food“No matter if we’re in a boom or a downturn, the amount of services we provide never slows down,” Stansbury said.

Looking ahead, the Williston Salvation Army’s biggest challenge will be to secure adequate funding.

“Services are up, but donations are down,” Stansbury added. “The donors I talk to love us, but they all say the same thing – they’re doing as much as they can to support us, but money is tight.”

If you or your business is able, please support The Salvation Army by making an online donation or signing up to volunteer.


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