Posted on November 01, 2022
Announcing Our 50th Anniversary Celebration!
Join us at the PISVC for fun, food, and celebration of our 50 years of service!
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grassNAC Breaks Ground! Learn about our newest Affordable Housing community in development.
Join us at the PISVC for fun, food, and celebration of our 50 years of service!
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Residents at Coral Canyon enjoyed a community movie night! Thanks to all our residents for coming out to enjoy the night! Check out photos from the event!
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Thank you to our wonderful volunteers from Nationwide who stopped by Stepping Stone to support a much needed clean up event! Check out photos from the event!
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We are incredibly grateful for the recent grant funding we've received!
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NAC is a proud sponsor of the Indigenous People’s Day Fest, a celebration of, “origins and indigeneity as this nation's First Peoples’.â€
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Meet Edison Brown, NAC’s new Donor/Volunteer Manager!
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The judging is complete!
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When the first World War broke out in 1914 hundreds of young men enlisted, including Native American boys from the Phoenix Indian Industrial School. Though, at the time, Native Americans were not yet citizens of the United States.
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Turning on Amazon Smile supports Native American Connections as you shop. It’s FREE!
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Native American Connections applied for and was awarded $120,000 from Local Initiatives Service Committee-Phoenix to participate in the national Funds to Feed grant program. Over the past eight months we've expended those funds with two goals: first, to provide meals and food supplies to fixed / low-income individuals and families; second, to support local, Indigenous, small businesses which faced serious economic setbacks from the pandemic. We accomplished both!
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A "chronically homeless" individual is defined to mean a homeless individual with a disability who lives either in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter or in an institutional care facility if the individual has been living in the facility for fewer than ninety (90) days and had been living in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven or in an emergency shelter immediately before entering the institutional care facility. In order to meet the ‘‘chronically homeless’’ definition, the individual also must have been living as described above continuously for at least twelve (12) months or on at least four (4) separate occasions in the last three (3) years, where the combined occasions total a length of time of at least twelve (12) months. Each period separating the occasions must include at least seven (7) nights of living in a situation other than a place not meant for human habitation, in an emergency shelter or in a safe haven.
Federal nondiscrimination laws define a person with a disability to include any (1) individual with a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities; (2) individual with a record of such impairment; or (3) individual who is regarded as having such an impairment. In general, a physical or mental impairment includes, but is not limited to, examples of conditions such as orthopedic, visual, speech and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, autism, epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, heart disease, diabetes, Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), developmental disabilities, mental illness, drug addiction, and alcoholism.