JOPLIN, Mo. —
Valerie Searcy said the biggest challenge sometimes facing people who need assistance is just knowing where to look.
Searcy, director of marketing for United Way Of Southwest Missouri, said it’s not uncommon for someone who needs help to make five different calls before locating the right agency.
That’s where the 2-1-1 phone service comes in, she said.
The 2-1-1 service is similar to the 9-1-1 emergency system, but instead of directing callers to public safety departments, the 2-1-1 system directs them to social agencies or other not-for-profit organizations that can help.
Searcy said the idea for a 2-1-1 system grew, in part, out of misplaced 9-1-1 calls.
“When 9-1-1 first started, some people were calling 9-1-1 because they needed diapers for their baby, or money for food and didn’t know where to go,” she said.
The 2-1-1 system has been up and running in every Missouri county since 2008 and longer in Kansas and Oklahoma, Searcy said, but United Way agencies in Missouri and across the country have just begun working to get the word out.
“We want to make sure that our local agencies and nonprofits are signed up on the system, and to let the community know that we are here and that it’s up and running. You don’t have to part of the United Way to use 2-1-1; it’s a community service,” she said.
In Missouri the 2-1-1 system is sponsored by the Missouri Foundation for Health and the United Way of St. Louis.
Searcy said that when someone dials 2-1-1 from a land line, their call will be answered by someone in the St. Louis Command Center. The caller will be asked for their ZIP code and then asked to explain what their problem is or what sort of assistance they need. The person at the Command Center will then direct the caller to the agency or agencies in the caller’s area that can best help them, Searcy said.
“We don’t want people to have to call five different agencies to find someone who can help them. This, we hope, will save them a lot of headaches, “ she said.
Searcy said that in 2009 the 2-1-1 phone system fielded 1,586 calls from Jasper and Newton counties.
“The top reasons for calling 2-1-1 were for help with electric bills, water bills, rent assistance, mortgage help, gas and locations of food pantries,” Searcy said.
Cell phones?
The 2-1-1 system is not available on all cell phones. Valerie Searcy, with United Way of Southwest Missouri, said currently the service is available on AT&T phones. Cell phone users who don’t have 2-1-1 service can call 800-427-4626 to be connected with the St. Louis Command Center. There also is a 2-1-1 Web page at www.211missouri.org. that people can access to locate assistance in their area.
Local News
United Way touts 2-1-1 phone system for people who need assistance
- Local News
-
-
Cattle prices reach record highs as inventories drop to 60-year lows
Just a few years ago, a 700-pound steer calf brought 60 cents a pound for Jim McCann, a cattleman who lives near Miller. Now, a comparable calf may bring nearly three times that amount, McCann said Tuesday.
-
GALLERY: Missouri Arts Council honors Joplin as Creative Community
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Joplin’s creativity was heralded in a state award presented Wednesday, but it was the town’s resiliency that earned it a standing ovation from arts supporters and state legislators attending ceremonies at the Capitol.
-
‘A creek runs through it’ concept posed for new JHS
The Joplin Board of Education got its first peek at preliminary architectural renderings for the new Joplin High School at a special meeting Wednesday night. Architects from DLR Group, based in Omaha, Neb., and Corner Greer & Associates, based in Joplin, presented the plans to the board for its blessing to move forward with the design concept.
-
Synthetic pot cited in charge; two girls sick
An 18-year-old Neosho resident was charged with child endangerment after being accused of supplying two teenage girls with “incense,” or synthetic marijuana, that made them sick enough Tuesday night to require hospital treatment.
-
Judge overrules defense motions in infant death case
A judge has denied a recent series of motions by Eddie Salazar’s attorney to get statements he made to police suppressed before his trial next month on a charge that he murdered his 8-month-old son two years ago.
-
Kansan describes trips into space during PSU visit
Everyone had a reason Wednesday afternoon for heading to Yates Hall at Pittsburg State University. Kansas native Steven Hawley was there to make a presentation called “The Engineering, Scientific and Cultural Legacy of the Space Shuttle,” which attempted to fit into 30 minutes 30 years of human space flight and what we have learned from it.
-
Authorities not sure whether gun had any role in death
An autopsy is scheduled to be performed today on a body discovered inside a mobile home that was destroyed by fire late Tuesday night.
-
MSSU president says governor’s proposal provides some relief
Bruce Speck, president of Missouri Southern State University, on Wednesday said Gov. Jay Nixon’s plan to restore $40 million of his proposed $106 million cut to higher education would help ease the university’s situation.
-
Mike Pound: Honoring a great lady and a life well lived
Dorothy Parker’s friends and family will tell you she knew how to live. The transplant from New Iberia, La., took Neosho by storm when she relocated there in 1993. In 1994, Dorothy suggested that the folks at St. John’s Episcopal Church, 305 W. Spring St., put on a Mardi Gras dinner, and she offered to do the bulk of the cooking.
-
Mo. AG candidates objects to birth control order
Republican attorney general candidate Ed Martin wants Missouri to object to a federal decision requiring church-affiliated employers to cover birth control.
- More Local News Headlines
-






