Laundry Love https://laundrylove.org Love. Dignity. Detergent. Tue, 01 Oct 2024 14:57:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://laundrylove.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-laundrylovelogo-red-32x32.png Laundry Love https://laundrylove.org 32 32 St. Joseph Welcomes Laundry Love https://laundrylove.org/st-joseph-welcomes-laundry-love/ Thu, 01 Dec 2022 20:38:24 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=15050

St. Joseph welcomes Laundry Love program

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Dignity Conference & Celebrating 20 Years of Laundry Love https://laundrylove.org/dignity-conference-celebrating-20-years-of-laundry-love/ Tue, 01 Nov 2022 21:51:41 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=14863 Are you active in the DIGNITY sector – non profits, intiatives, compassion, justice, reconciliation, human care, restoration, rehabilitation, kindness, neighboring? Yes, the list is long. Well, this two day gathering/conference is a place for you to come and meet others like you, find some encouragement, and be reminded of how vitally important your worth and your work is.

My name is Greg Russinger, co-founder of Laundry Love, a national non profit. We’ve been washing the clothes and bedding of low to no income families and persons for the last 20 years. We are throwing a party, not only to celebrate what we’ve been up to, but what you’ve been up to.

The Dignity Conference is a hybrid of connection and celebration. An invitation for learning and loving. These two days are for all ages, all faith traditions, all people from all cultures, backgrounds, and communities. In a world of fractures and frailty, dignity helps us see the beauty in humanity.

Please join us in Dallas Texas in 2023. A quick note on that, we choose Dallas because of its central location in the country and we hear it’s BBQ is pretty good.

REGISTER TODAY.

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Demand for Laundry Love Grows in Jamestown https://laundrylove.org/demand-for-laundry-love-grows-in-jamestown/ Mon, 12 Sep 2022 18:29:44 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=14535 JAMESTOWN – More people are coming to Rainbow Laundry twice a month to take advantage of a program that washes their clothes for free.

But that in turn has put a strain on the program’s budget to help people, and the coordinator hopes donations will continue to offset the cost.

Terri Krovoza is the coordinator for Laundry Love, a program she worked to launch in 2017 in Jamestown through the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Now going into its sixth year in November, she says the demand has doubled from pre-pandemic levels.

“We have started averaging between 25 and 30 individuals and families that come (each time) which is a big increase over pre-COVID,” she said. “We probably had maybe 13 to 15 families and individuals (before that), and I don’t know what brought on the big increase.”

Laundry Love is offered on the first and third Thursday of each month from 2 to 6 p.m. at Rainbow Laundry. Krovoza learned about the national program from a fellow member of the South Central Homeless Coalition. It originated in California when a pastor asked a homeless man what would have the most impact on his life. His answer was clean clothes, so people would treat him as a human being.

The initiative that partners with individuals, groups and laundromats in the U.S. to provide help with laundry resonated with Krovoza.

“I thought, ‘Wow, this would be really pretty easy to do,’” she said.

With backing from her church after raising $400 in quarters from parishioners, the program launched and was offered once a month in Jamestown but has grown to twice a month. Donations have kept the program going.

“I know we don’t have a lot of homeless people in Jamestown but we do have a lot of lower income (people) that just need a little extra help,” Krovoza said, “and they really seem to be appreciative of what we do for them.”

Laundry Love provides quarters to wash and dry people’s clothing and bedding and serves people of all ages. Free laundry detergent and dryer sheets are also provided but some people use their own supplies, Krovoza said. Laundry Love volunteers are on site to place the coins in the machines but do not do the laundry, she said. There are no criteria for the people they help.

“If they feel that they need it, we just provide it,” Krovoza said. “We don’t ask questions.”

Participants can get three free loads as an individual and six for a family, Krovoza said. Families of four or more can get eight loads of laundry free.

“It’s kind of a learning curve for people because they just want to bring all their stuff (such as rugs which they don’t include),” Krovoza said, “ … and that wasn’t a problem when we only had 15 to 20 people coming. But now that we have 25 to 30 we are going through a lot of money and it’s not going to be sustainable.”

Laundry Love now costs about $1,000 per month, Krovoza said.

“And that’s … why we’re needing a lot more donations because we run this strictly on donations,” she said.

Krovoza said she’s appreciative of community support, noting multiple clubs, banks, churches and other organizations have donated to the initiative. She said gaming funds “really saved us this last year.”

“I just really want to emphasize the appreciation that we have for the community and all the support that they have given us,” she said. “We couldn’t do it without them.”

One man who came to Rainbow Laundry on Thursday, Sept. 1, during the most recent Laundry Love event said he is on a limited income.

“It helps out a lot,” said the man, who did not want to be identified.

Volunteers are also welcome to help with Laundry Love events, Krovoza said. With only a few volunteers most days – two on Sept. 1 – it gets busy trying to help everyone when there’s a rush, she said.

For more information on Laundry Love, to volunteer or contribute, contact Krovoza at 269-9533.

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WESTWOOD, Ohio https://laundrylove.org/westwood-ohio/ Mon, 06 Jun 2022 21:14:49 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=13943

WESTWOOD, Ohio

Laundry Love offers chance for clean clothes to those who can’t afford it
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National Tour https://laundrylove.org/national-tour-event/ Mon, 30 Sep 2019 09:27:21 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=764

National Tour

Seven Cities, Seven Gatherings, One Movement
This tour is created so Laundry Love Locations-teams, friends, guests-
can gather together, celebrate, connect, share stories, and conspire.

Cities & Dates

Los Angeles CA – November 9th, 2019
Portland OR – November 16th, 2019
Kansas City MO – April 17th, 2020
Bentonville AR – April 18th, 2020
Dallas TX – April 19th, 2020
Washington D.C – April 25th, 2020
New York NY – April 26th, 2020

Laundry Love fosters community participation within a neighborhood through the many layers of connection it inspires.

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Serve NWA Laundry Love Initiative Enters 10th Year https://laundrylove.org/serve-nwa-laundry-love-initiative-enters-10th-year/ Fri, 04 Jan 2019 17:03:22 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=723

Serve NWA Laundry Love Initiative Enters 10th Year

NORTHWEST ARKANSAS (Fox 24) – A Northwest Arkansas organization is working to make sure all families have clean clothes.

Serve NWA is celebrating the 10th anniversary of its Laundry Love initiative. The organization has offered laundry love to neighbors in need in its three locations every month for the past ten years.

Every month, the organization provides an evening free of laundry, a hot meal, friendship and guidance to resources and nonprofits in our community.

One of those events is being held on Friday (Jan. 4). The event will run from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. at the Westwood Center Laundromat on North 13th Street in Rogers.

Watch the Video HERE

Laundry Love fosters community participation within a neighborhood through the many layers of connection it inspires.

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Laundry Love expands to Woodland https://laundrylove.org/laundry-love-expands-to-woodland/ https://laundrylove.org/laundry-love-expands-to-woodland/#comments Fri, 04 Jan 2019 16:51:27 +0000 https://laundrylove.org/?p=720

Laundry Love expands to Woodland

Program allows people to do laundry for free one day a month at Cedars Laundromat

WOODLAND — Valerie Guerra spent three days trying to get the key to use the laundry room at the Lewis River RV Park recently, and even if she was able to get it, she’d be doing laundry for six people on one machine.

For Guerra, laundry day has been one of the harder aspects of moving her family to the RV park back in October. It’s hard to get in the laundry room, and if she can’t, going to a laundromat can cost upwards of $50, a trip, even more if she’s doing bedding and towels.

For the last three months, Guerra and her family have had some help. A Woodland branch of the national Laundry Love program started in April. The program allows an organization or church to cover the cost of doing laundry. A Vancouver branch started in 2010, and reopened in January after a car crashed into the laundromat last year. There are also locations in Washougal and Longview.

“This saved us this month,” Guerra said at the Sept. 11 Laundry Love event in Woodland.

Read More Here

Laundry Love fosters community participation within a neighborhood through the many layers of connection it inspires.

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The Laundromat Lives On https://laundrylove.org/the-laundromat-lives-on/ https://laundrylove.org/the-laundromat-lives-on/#respond Tue, 21 Aug 2018 17:06:53 +0000 http://laundrylove.org/?p=562

The Laundromat Lives On

Washed up city laundromats are enjoying a second life as community spaces

“In all my years of living in Manhattan, I have never met someone who has a washer/dryer in their apartment. Most of us think of these people as mythical unicorns. Like owning your own car.”

–– Jesse Richards’ response to the Quora questionHow do people in Manhattan do laundry?

One person’s dirty laundry is another’s livelihood. Those of us in New York City not fortunate enough to own washers and dryers have to make do with the laundromat, a long-beloved urban fixture. Most self-service laundries are mom-and-pop establishments and as of 2010, NYC had over 2,500 of them.

But don’t throw in the towel just yet – these are only signs that the boring, uninviting New York laundromat scene is ready for a revamp.

Local laundry service providers are now compelled to come up with tactics that not only attract local clientele but also keep them coming back. If there’s any business that thrives solely on customer retention, it’s laundry. If the average person spends around two hours at their local laundromat, store owners might as well make that time enjoyable and even – just imagine – something to look forward to.

That’s why laundromats today are increasingly going a step further and doubling as something else – cafes, craft breweries and even cocktail lounges.

Celsious is a new outfit in Williamsburg, Brooklyn that epitomizes the concept laundromat trend. Complete with an outdoor patio and organic coffee bar, it looks more like a wellness resort than a laundromat. Inside Greenpoint’s Sunshine Laundromat, pinball machines chime happily next to coin-operated washers and dryers. Brands too have caught on over the years – LG has a luxury laundry lounge in West Harlem with flat-screen TVs and internet-connected laptops for free access. A complimentary “laundry wall” in American Eagle Outfitters’ new concept store gives NYU undergrads in the Union Square area the opportunity to do their laundry for free and study or hang out in the studio bar. The new Sit & Spin Laundry Lounge in Big Sky, Montana is a “laundry bistro” that offers culturally relevant cocktails like the orange, white and blue Tide Pod shot.

Other efforts to make those two-some-odd hours of laundry worthwhile have been through community programming and civic engagement. The World’s Largest Laundromat, in Berwyn, Illinois, just hosted a National Literacy Summit in March, and continues to conduct immigration seminars and organize pizza nights every Wednesday. The Laundry Love initiative, with a presence in over 70 churches, mosques and synagogues around the country, helps the working poor out by providing free detergent, dryer sheets and quarters for machines. Supporters of the movement believe that they’re practicing the Biblical commandment in a real-time, actionable way. The Laundromat Project transforms laundromats in NYC’s underserved neighborhoods into informal art and learning spaces by organizing art workshops and community collaborations.

Through these efforts laundromats have become more than a mundane fixture in people’s lives. After coffeeshops, bars and general stores, says Brian Wallace, CEO of the Coin Laundry Association, they have the potential to be recognized as the third place for local residents and “one of the few remaining places where people congregate.” After all, laundromats, like bodegas, share a meaningful history with NYC. It makes sense for them to be redesigned, revitalized and celebrated.

Laundry Love fosters community participation within a neighborhood through the many layers of connection it inspires.

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Love In Pennsylvania https://laundrylove.org/love-in-pennsylvania/ https://laundrylove.org/love-in-pennsylvania/#comments Wed, 25 Apr 2018 19:36:59 +0000 http://laundrylove.org/?p=436

Love In Pennsylvania

Doing the laundry is a chore that most of us perform without a second thought. Dirty clothes go into the washer. Clean clothes come out of the dryer. Press, fold, put away.

In between the task, we make dinner, open mail, pay bills, check messages.

For those of us who are fortunate enough to have a washer and dryer, the routine is simply part of what we do.

For those who don’t have washers and dryers, though, doing the laundry is anything but routine. Load the car with baskets of dirty clothes, laundry detergent, dryer sheets, quarters and something to do while waiting.

Those who have limited resources have to face more than the mere inconvenience of loading up, carrying in, carrying out and unloading.

How many loads can be done this week? Do we have enough quarters? Will the laundry detergent we have cover the number of loads?

It was this scenario that prompted a group of caring people in Southern California to form Laundry Love, a “movement that partners with groups, schools and local laundromats to care for the low-income families and individuals,” according to the group’s website, laundrylove.org.

READ MORE

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Better Angels: Taking cue from pope, Laundry Love affirms human dignity one load at a time https://laundrylove.org/better-angels-taking-cue-from-pope-laundry-love-affirms-human-dignity-one-load-at-a-time/ https://laundrylove.org/better-angels-taking-cue-from-pope-laundry-love-affirms-human-dignity-one-load-at-a-time/#respond Tue, 06 Mar 2018 23:32:11 +0000 http://laundrylove.org/?p=513

Better Angels: Taking cue from pope, Laundry Love affirms human dignity one load at a time

What likely is the world’s most famous laundromat is also relatively new.

The Lavanderia di Papa Francis — or Pope Francis Laundry — opened in the spring of last year in a former hospital near the Vatican.

It was a modest establishment when it opened:  Six washing machines and dryers, as well as an ample supply of detergent and fabric softeners.

But because of what it symbolized, the papal laundromat made news all over the world.

Use of the facility was free and, the Vatican said, designed to serve “the poorest of the poor, particularly the homeless, who will able to wash, dry and iron their clothes and blankets.”

Better Angels: Taking cue from pope, Laundry Love affirms human dignity one load at a time

Pope Francis’ advocacy for the world’s poor, unmoored and indigent is admired by many, both Catholic and non. Sure, cleanliness might have some approximation to godliness, but the two, at best, live in the same general area. But godliness’ real neighbor is compassion.

As it would happen, around the same time the pope was opening his laundromat, Doug and Sally Klingler were looking for a way to reach deeper into the Milwaukee community.

Read Article

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