Hope Center at Pullen in the News and Observer

In April, the News and Observer talked with 2 of our clients about their experience aging out of foster care and the help that they received from The Hope Center at Pullen. These 2 young ladies are members of the HCP youth advisory board and were instrumental in designing The Hope Village Method. Read more […]

Hope Village at Method on CBS17

In April, The Hope Center at Pullen was featured on CBS 17 for our partnership with CASA to build a 9-apartment building called The Hope Village at Method. This project will help us give access to safe, stable and affordable housing for former foster youth in Wake County, North Carolina. You can watch more about […]

Hope Village at Method on WRAL

In April, WRAL featured The Hope Center at Pullen’s partnership with CASA to build The Hope Village at Method. This 9-apartment building will allow The Hope Center at Pullen to have access to safe, stable and affordable housing for former foster youth in Wake County. Read more about this project here. Your donations to HCP […]

We Won!

We’re honored to announce that the Aging Out Institute awarded The Hope Center at Pullen a 2022 Flame Award for providing outstanding services to young adults aging out of foster care.

HCP Participant Kunthea Dickson Shares Her Story

The biggest change is I am now the person I dreamed I could be, I can walk right past someone I knew from my past and they would not recognize me today. I talk different, walk different, think differently, and represent myself in a way that makes me proud of myself.

Q: How Are Wake County’s Former Foster Youth Doing in 2020?

A: They are defying the odds. 100% of the clients we housed two years ago are still living in safe, stable housing.  At a time when Home is Everything, we couldn’t be more thrilled to release our 2019-20 Impact Report. Our support and your partnership were more important than ever this year.  Check out the full report to […]

Striving For Equity in the Foster Care System

Children of Black, Hispanic, and Native American parents are more likely to enter foster care than their white peers.  Nationally 33% of kids in foster care are Black, but they make up only 15% of the child population. Yet federal studies indicate that child abuse and neglect is actually lower for Black families than it is […]

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