Boys Hope Girls Hope of Southern California is a place where children can get an education and a chance at hope for better possibilities in life. The children there come from homeless shelters, and are identified by school counselors or from homes that cannot provide for them.
“We offer 24/7 service for the young adults,” said Executive Director Robin Sinclair. “We offer love, stability, security, care, and we’re a presence for the kids.”
Hope does not operate like foster homes and does not rely on government funding. Instead, boys and girls between the ages of 10 and 14 are accepted into the program and they live with full-time staff, who run the residence much like a home.
The teens stay there until they finish high school. The boys’ home is in Santa Ana and the girls’ home is in Fullerton.
“What sets us apart is these scholars come to us with promise, tremendous potential and willingness to learn,” Sinclair said.
And they are held to that expectation. The teens have to maintain a good grade-point average, and they must keep up with their assigned chores.
Each home has a capacity for six children, and each has four full-time employees.
In the girls’ home “we go through a lot of hair products, and there’s always something baking in the oven,” Sinclair said.
At dinner time, the homes’ occupants sit down to eat together like a family.
Although Hope is not a Catholic organization, Mater Dei High School, an all-boys school in Santa Ana, and Rosary High School, an all-girls school in Fullerton, offer full scholarship to Hope’s boys and girls, Sinclair said.
“We have incredible success stories because of the education they receive. These are well-known schools across the county,” Sinclair said. “We are very fortunate that these schools give us scholarship.”
Rachel is one of those success stories, Sinclair said.