Supporting single mothers with a wraparound approach
Q and A with Sara J. Cumming (PhD ’14 Sociology) Executive Director of Home Suite Hope, and the Faculty of Arts 2023 Rising Star Alumni Award recipient
Q and A with Sara J. Cumming (PhD ’14 Sociology) Executive Director of Home Suite Hope, and the Faculty of Arts 2023 Rising Star Alumni Award recipient
By Faculty of ArtsAs the daughter of a single teen mom, and a former young single mother herself, Dr. Sara Cumming (PhD ’14, Sociology) knows the challenges her clients face at Home Suite Hope. As executive director of the Halton organization, Cumming designs programs to help unhoused single mothers put together the crucial pieces they need: housing, jobs, childcare and more. Cumming’s doctoral research at Waterloo laid the foundation for her work there and at Sheridan College, where she’s an award-winning sociology professor. Cumming is known for finding creative ways to build ties with the community:sourcing grocery donations for students during lockdown, brokering temporary residences at Sheridan for Ukranian refugees. For her current project, the Community Ideas Factory, she’s working with 16 local organizations to build a life skills course that can be used and adapted by community organizations across Canada.
Safe and affordable housing is key. When a vulnerable person or family feels secure in their housing, they can start to work on all the other issues in their lives. We need to understand the importance of wraparound approaches—those that wrap many services around individuals, rather than requiring them to find each service themselves. For single mothers particularly, that can mean access to subsidized childcare, education and employment that addresses gender barriers in the labour market, and trauma-based counselling and mentorship. The approaches taken should also come from an equity and inclusivity perspective.
My academic career was really fueled by my personal circumstances. When I entered university, I was the single mother of two young girls and the child of a teenage single mother. For most of my childhood I was raised on social assistance in a very small apartment with no access to transportation. It was through my academic pursuits that I came to understand the ways in which gender had informed and influenced all aspects of my life—the ways in which our lives have been constructed primarily around these preconceived notions of what it means to be born female or male. The participants in my program at Home Suite Hope have difficult lives primarily because they were born female. Many have been the victims of sexual and/or domestic violence. They are simultaneously expected to be with their young children and work full time to support them. To add to societal judgement, women are less likely to have access to high-paying employment while they are single parenting. Most social policies have been written in ways that are gender blind, yet have the biggest impact on women, especially single mothers. Many women with access to high-paying employment feel that gender imbalances are changing and that women have more equal access to everything now—however, there is a real class division here.
I was fortunate enough to get into Columbia Lake—the campus townhouses for students with families. This was an amazing experience for me and my children, living in a large community of individuals all balancing school and household/family responsibilities. Neighbours traded childcare with each other, had study parties and potlucks while all our children played together in a very safe setting. It allowed me the security to get through the PhD despite my single mother status. During my time in the Sociology and Legal Studies department I made lifelong friends with other PhD and master’s students and have stayed in constant contact with a few of the professors. This safe and affordable housing, in conjunction with the social supports I was able to attain, are what stand out most for me.
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The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.