This article is part of a series on Innovative Internships.
Northeastern University junior Maddie Elsea β19 serves as a case worker for men who face challenges with addiction and housing. She has spent the first six months of this year working full time at the Pine Street Inn in Boston as part of Northeasternβs cooperative education program.Μύ
Being homeless and recovering from substance abuse would make life hard at any time. However, the pandemic, Elsea notes, has exacerbated those struggles. Her clients are particularly vulnerable to changes in government programs, which can affect their access to medical care, employment, and housing. And COVID-19 has caused upheaval on a huge scale.Μύ
βThe pandemic has impacted them intensely, and still does,β she says. Shelters, residential programs, and halfway houses had to cut significantly the number of people they can serve, she adds.Μύ
βOur program capacity is typically 50 beds, but since the pandemic it has been 20,β she explains. βSo you can imagine the amount of people that are left on the streets, with the emergency housing in Boston being so limited.βΜύ
During her years at 91΄σΙρ, Elsea participated actively in the theater department, starring in the 2019 musical Crazy for You, and volunteered with the Community Service Club. Now a double major in social work and theater, her goal is to use both disciplines to help people through drama therapy, a branch of mental health work similar to art therapy or music therapy.Μύ
This internship has convinced her that sheβs on the right career path. βEach of the men that I work with are deserving of compassion, respect, and support, and my job at its core is really just to show them that,β she says.Μύ