Clermont County

The County Resource Directory
provides a self-service database of agencies
and programs serving County residents
.

Clich this link: http://www.co.clermont.oh.us/

Area Agency on Aging
Clermont
County
644 Linn St. # 1100
Cincinnati , Ohio 45203
513-721-1025 phone
513-721-0090 fax
Adult day services, Companion services, Home delivered meals, Home medical equipment, Homemaker services, Home repair, Electronics monitoring systems, and medical transportation.
Adult Protective Services
Clermont
County
644 Linn St. #1100
Cincinnati , Ohio 45203
513-721-4330 phone
513-721-8304
fax
To respond to and investigate reports of elderly abuse, exploitation or neglect in a timely manner, and to offer assistance where needed.
Department of Job and Family Services
Clermont
County
2400 Clermont Center Drive
Batavia, Ohio 45103
513-732-7111 phone
513-732-7216
Fax
Hours 8:00- 4:30 Mon.- Fri.
Assistance with health care, food stamps, Financial assistance, food stamps, Shelter and transportation.
Board of Mental Retardation/ Developmental Disabilities
Clermont
County
4231 Grissom Drive
Batavia, Ohio3
513-732-7000
Phone
513-732-7006
Fax
Website
www.ccmrdd.org
County agency providing supports to children and adults who have mental retardation or developmental disabilities.
Crisis Intervention/mental health services
Clermont
County
1088 Wasserman way, Suite B
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-732-5449
Phone
Website
www.recoveryctr.org
Individual and family counseling this service is available as either a part of an existing group program or as a stand-alone service.
Child protective services
Clermont
County
2400 Clermont center dr. suite 206 C
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-732-7173
Phone
513-732-7833
Fax
Services are for families with children determined to be at risk of abuse and neglect.
Domestic Violence; House of peace
Clermont
County
P.o. Box 26
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-753-7281
Phone
1-800-540-4764
Hotline
Hours; 24 hours a day 7 days a week
Services include counseling( phone or in person) Shelter meals and intervention pf domestic abuse.

Misc. resources Clermont County

7162 Reading Rd. Cincinnati, Ohio

513-345-4160 Or 1-800-488-6070

The Ombudsman addresses the concerns of consumers in a variety of long term care settings. by investigating and resolving complaints; Promoting the enforcement of laws and regulations; Advising and recommending policy to sttae andd federal government agencies on long term care issuses; and educating the public, consumers, providers, and policy makers.

Misc. resources; Salvation army-Family services

Clermont County emergency shelter.
Clermont
County
600 Kilgore Avenue
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-732-8854
Phone
Website; www.salvationarmy.org

Services provided are health services, addiction dependency, worship services, and family tracing.
Misc. resources; United way of greater Cincinnati.
Clermont
County
2400 Reading Rd.
Cincinnati. , Ohio 45202-1458
513-762-7100
Phone
Website; www.uwgc.org
Services provided are food shelter
Misc. resources; YMCA Battered Womans Shelter
Clermont
County
No address
given
No address given.
513-872-9259
Phone
1-888-872-9259
Specialize in treatment and counseling for women.
Misc. resource; YMCA eastern area food pantry.
Clermont
County
55 South Fourth St .
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-732-0450
Phone
Hours : Mon.-Fri. 9:00 am and 1:00-4:00pm
Food and other basic needs provided.
Salvation Army
Clermont
County
600 Kilgore St .
Batavia , Ohio
45103
513-732-6241
Phone
513-732-1237
Fax
Hours; Mon.-Fri. 9:00 am --- 4:30 pm
Services include worships services, Food Distribution Ministry, Youth programs and Women’s ministries.
Misc. resources; Goodwill Industries
Clermont
County
10600
Springfield pike
Cincinnati , Ohio 45215
513-771-4800
Phone
513-771-4959
www.cincinnatigoodwill.com
The services that are provided are personal evaluation and office skills training to career counseling, also childcare and transportation.
Misc. resources; Catholic social services
Clermont
County
100 East Eight St .
Cincinnati , Ohio
45202
513-241-7745
Phone
513-470-8083
After hours and weekends.
The services offered are parenting or adoption.
Misc. resources; United way
Clermont
County
2085 A Front wheel dr.
Batavia , Ohio
45103-3225
513-536-3003
Phone
national.unitedway.org
website
Services includes an improvement in peoples lives by mobilizing the caring powers of communities.
Misc. resources; Lutheran social services
Clermont
County
11370 Springfield Pike
Cincinnati . Ohio
45242
513-326-5430
Phone
Services include counseling, parenting, adoption and pregnancy counseling.
Misc. resources; Metropolitan Housing
Clermont
County
65 South Market St .
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-732-6010
Phone
513-732-6520 Fax for public housing
513-732-0851 Fax for section 8
513-732-6010 phone with TDD
HOURS; 8:00-12:00 A.M. OR 1:00-4:30 P.M.
The metropolitan housing authority seeks to help assist low-income families, including those who are elderly, disabled, or handicapped, with safe, decent, and affordable housing.
Misc. resources; Clermont County health department
Clermont
County
2275 Bauer Road suite 300
Batavia , Ohio 45103
513-732-7499
Phone
513-732-7936
Fax number
Website
www.clermonthealthdistrict.org
Services include flu vaccines, immunizations, birth, death, marriage, divorce records.
Misc. resources; American Red Cross
Clermont
County
4530 Eastgate Blvd.
Cincinnati , Ohio 45245
513-943-6600
Phone
Services include first aid classes, blood bank, and disaster relief .

Rx for Ohio Website;

who

RxforOhio is a program that connects qualified, low-income people with discount prescription drugs, direct from the pharmaceutical manufacturer.
Open Door Ministries- For people with disabilities (513) 961-2259 Representative payee for managing disability incomes for the mentally ill; emergency assistance to families in Walnut Hills; food pantry, drop-in area, neighborhood programs
Mental Health Assn. (513) 721-2910 MHA provides education, advocacy and coordination of services through a variety of programs. The MHA maintains a searchable comprehensive listing of support groups for persons with mental health needs.
FreeStore/ FoodBank  (513) 482-4500 We provide food and clothing to people who are unemployed, or whose homes have been destroyed by flood or fire. We provide evening meals to hungry children through Kids Cafe. We help people find safe places to live. We distribute donated and surplus food to approximately 500 non-profit agencies in 20 counties, who in turn help prevent hunger in their own neighborhoods.

Southern Ohio Health Services Network

Central Office
400 TechneCenter Drive
Suite 402
Milford, OH 45150
(513) 576-7700
1-800-495-7647

Hours
M-F 7:30-5

WEBSITE; http://www.sohsn.com/home/index.php

Our Vision and Values

Our values guide us in making day to day moral decisions and resolving ethical dilemmas, and define the character of the SOHSN.

Quality and Excellence
SOHSN is committed to providing excellence in patient care, and is dedicated to the belief that every patient deserves to be treated with respect, dignity, and equality, irrespective of their race, religion, economic status, or ability to pay.

Integrity
SOHSN provides patient care in an honest, fair, and ethical manner.

Patient Rights
SOHSN believes that patients have a right to quality health care, delivered in a respectful manner that is guided by the premise that patients deserve to be educated and treated with compassion.

Customers
SOHSN exists because of our patients and our employees who are both considered our customers. We are dedicated to provide satisfaction to all our customers.

Camelot Community Care

CINCINNATI OFFICE
Steve Tutt, State Director
2245 Gilbert Avenue, Suite 100
Cincinnati, OH 45206
Business: (513) 961-5900
Fax: (513) 961-5903
cincinnati@camelotcare.com

Website;

http://www.camelotcommunitycare.org/default.asp

Camelot Community Care is national non-profit child welfare and behavioral health organization committed to providing quality services to children and families that are client focused and strength based. Our programs include In Home Counseling, Therapeutic Foster Care, Outpatient counseling, Case Management, and adoptions.

Camelot Community Care's mission is to develop and provide services which enable children and families to realize their own potential.

Camelot Community Care operates in 5 states serving over 5000 families with over 400 employees

CCC

43 East Main Street

Amelia, OH 45102

Ph:  513-947-7000

www.clermontcounseling.org

Clermont Counseling Center (CCC) is a private, non-profit  mental health center which has served the residents of Clermont County since 1973. Their mission is to promote the positive mental health and well being of our clients, their families and our Clermont community.

CCC provides comprehensive mental health services to adults and families who are confronted with emotional difficulties, family and relationship problems or abuse, and mental illness. They provide a wide range of essential services for adults with mental illness as well as the traditional therapy services for County residents. They are committed to best practices, partnerships, and outcomes, and seek to serve a wide spectrum of our community.

CCC embraces the Recovery Model, based primarily on their exposure to information from the Boston Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation (BCPR) and the works of William Anthony, who defines recovery as,"a deeply personal, unique process of changing one's attitudes, values, feelings, goals, skills, and/or roles. It is a way of living a satisfying, hopeful, and contributing life even with the limitations caused by mental illness."

Southern Ohio Health Services Network

Central Office:
400 TechneCenter Drive, Suite 402
Milford, Ohio 45150-2746
(513) 576-7700
(513) 576-1020 Fax

CLICK LINK BELOW TO VIEW WEBSITE;

http://www.sohsn.com/home/index.php


At-A-Glance

  • Private, not-for-profit Federally Qualified Community Health Center (FQHC)
  • Founded in 1976 to address the issue of access to primary health care
  • Serves five Appalachian counties: Adams, Brown, Clermont, Highland and Fayette
  • Fourteen offices throughout the service area
  • Approximately 60 primary care providers
  • Services include: Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Ob/Gyn, Psychiatry, Mental Health, Dentistry, WIC, Pharmacy
  • Employs physicians, dentists, licensed independent social workers, nurse practitioners and physician assistants
  • Employs nearly 300 support staff
  • Receives federal funds annually which account for less than 20% of SOHSN budget
  • Operating Budget is approximately $25 Million
  • Offers a discounted fee to patients and families who qualify
  • Payer mix includes: Medicaid, Medicare, Private Insurance and Managed Care as well as uninsured and underinsured
  • In 2004, SOHSN treated 48,000 patients with 180,000 visits
  • Governed by a Community-based Board of Trustees
  • Participates in Health Disparities Collaborative
  • Active Quality Improvement Program
  • Works collaboratively with its community hospitals and local groups and agencies
  • Continually strives to provide quality, cost-effective primary care to the residents of southern Ohio
  • Mission-driven organization which values its patients, providers, employees and the communities it serves


Our Vision and Values

Our values guide us in making day to day moral decisions and resolving ethical dilemmas, and define the character of the SOHSN.

Quality and Excellence
SOHSN is committed to providing excellence in patient care, and is dedicated to the belief that every patient deserves to be treated with respect, dignity, and equality, irrespective of their race, religion, economic status, or ability to pay.

Integrity
SOHSN provides patient care in an honest, fair, and ethical manner.

Patient Rights
SOHSN believes that patients have a right to quality health care, delivered in a respectful manner that is guided by the premise that patients deserve to be educated and treated with compassion.

Customers
SOHSN exists because of our patients and our employees who are both considered our customers. We are dedicated to provide satisfaction to all our customers.


We are delighted to hear from you!  Please contact us in any one of the following ways.


Cincinnati Habitat is located in the basement of the historic Covenant First Presbyterian Church in downtown Cincinnati.
By Phone: (513) 621-4147

By Mail:  201 West Eighth Street; Cincinnati, OH 45202

The Cincinnati Habitat office entrance is located on the Elm Street side of the church. Enter through the black iron gates and come up the ramp to the brown door. Please press the Habitat button for entry. Once inside, please use stairs to the right to go down to the Habitat offices.

Parking
  • 2-hour parking meters are available in front of church on Elm Street
  • Parking lot (Systems Parking) around the corner on Eighth Street between Elm and Plum (Park car - note number on the parking space used - go across street to garage office to pay)
  • Parking Garage at corner of 7th and Elm — enter off 7th Street or Elm Street

Who We Are

  • Cincinnati Habitat for Humanity is a non-profit Christian housing ministry that seeks to eliminate substandard housing by building decent, affordable homes to sell to low-income families in need.
  • Cincinnati Habitat is about more than just building houses. The staff and board of directors of Cincinnati Habitat are dedicated individuals who are passionate about building homes, families, communities and hope!
  • Cincinnati Habitat for Humanity is privately funded and does not receive any support from United Way or Habitat for Humanity International. Funding of cash and in-kind contributions from Cincinnati businesses, churches, foundations, organizations and individuals provide money, labor and talent for each Cincinnati Habitat housing project. To find more funding information, visit our Donations page.

Who We Help
Cincinnati Habitat helps those who help themselves. With volunteer labor and tax-deductible donations of money and materials, Cincinnati Habitat builds decent and affordable homes with the help of hard-working "partner families" who actually purchase the homes when completed. Each partner family invests 500 hours of their own labor or "sweat equity" into the home. In return, the home is sold to them at no profit and financed through an affordable no-interest loan. The homeowner's monthly mortgage payments help fund the construction of additional Habitat homes.

Where We Build
Cincinnati Habitat builds in the City of Cincinnati and in parts of Hamilton County. Here in Cincinnati, only 38% of the population owns their own home compared to 68% nationwide. As a result, Cincinnati ranks the fifth lowest for home ownership of all comparably sized U.S. cities. There are 32,000 local families - or about 120,000 moms, dads, and children - that are unable to afford decent shelter.

The Disability Resources Monthly (DRM) Guide to Disibility Resources on the Internet

 

http://www.disabilityresources.org/OHIO.html

What We Are...   Disability Resources, inc. is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization established to promote and improve awareness, availability and accessibility of information that can help people with disabilities live, learn, love, work and play independently.    Who We Serve...   We serve thousands of individuals with disabilities through a multidisciplinary network of service providers and consumers. In order to reach as many people with disabilities as cost effectively as possible, we target our services and publications to libraries, disability organizations, independent living centers, rehabilitation facilities, educational institutions, and health and social service providers.    What We Do...   We disseminate information about books, pamphlets, magazines, newsletters, videos, databases, government agencies, nonprofit organizations, telephone hotlines and on-line services that provide free, inexpensive or hard-to-find information to help people with disabilities live independently.

Avonex Services   Multiple sclerosis (MS) treatment with AVONEX

 

One on one help when you need it most.

All services...

http://www.avonex.com/msavProject/avone

AVONEX Multiple Sclerosis Treatment

By taking AVONEX, you have chosen to declare your independence over multiple sclerosis (MS). You have chosen to take action and fight your MS.

Everyone has different life goals and reasons for going on therapy. Wanting to maintain a sense of freedom. Raising a family. Achieving a successful career. Whatever your specific goals are, once-a-week AVONEX may help empower you to pursue them. What did you do today that you want to be able to do tomorrow?

The Brain Injury Association of Ohio 

Call the State Office for the local contact's phone number:

1-866-OHIO-BIA (644-6242) toll free

Helpline

BIAOHs State Office staff responds to telephone and email requests for information, educational materials and assistance Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Contact: 1-866-OHIO-BIA (1-866-644-6242) toll-free in Ohio, 614-481-7100 in Columbus, or help@biaoh.org

CPAOs Executive Director, Beverly Johnson, will provide an update on Ohio’s Medicaid Buy-In at BIAOH’s Annual Conference.

Linkage & Technical Assistance to Support Groups

BIAOH maintains a database of over 50 independent support groups around the state offering peer support. BIAOH regularly shares information with group leaders, and provides technical assistance upon request.

Advocacy

BIAOH promotes public policy and system changes to improve services to individuals with brain injury and their families to make them more accessible, available, appropriate, and acceptable. This effort is central to BIAOH’s purpose since in Ohio there is no identified state agency responsible for the long-term service and support needs of one of the state’s largest disability populations

Ohio Medicaid Buy-In Becomes Law!

After years of hard work and persistence, Ohio’s advocacy community can celebrate passage of Medicaid Buy-In legislation since SB 4 language was folded into the State Budget Bill and signed into law on June 30, 2007. Ohio is the 35th state to adopt Medicaid Buy-In provisions.

Medicaid Buy-In is designed to benefit workers with disabilities by expanding eligibility for Medicaid health care coverage, provided these individuals don’t exceed certain income, asset or resource limits, and pay a monthly premium for the coverage.

While the broad parameters of Ohio’s Medicaid Buy-In are included in SB 4 language incorporated into the Budget Bill, work remains. According to staff of the Cerebral Palsy Association of Ohio (CPAO), who worked diligently for its passage, here’s what we can expect between now and January 2008:

“The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, in collaboration with the Medicaid Buy-In Advisory Council, will write the rules to implement the program and will seek approval from CMS. (CMS is the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services at the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services.) Additionally, a series of regional meetings will be planned to spread the word about this new program.”

BIAOH, along with more than a dozen other advocacy agencies and organizations, has a seat on Ohio’s Medicaid Buy-In Advisory Council.

Thanks is due all around to both advocates and responsive public officials who pushed this landmark legislation into law, including Ohio General Assembly sponsors, Senator Steve Stivers, and Rep. Jon Peterson, as well as Gov. Ted Strickland who made it a priority among his “Turn Around Ohio” initiatives.

CPAO’s Executive Director, Beverly Johnson, will provide an update on Ohio’s Medicaid Buy-In at BIAOH’s Annual Conference.

2008 CILO - Center for Independent Living Options
632 Vine Street, Suite 305, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-2600 - (513) 241-1707 fax - TTY: (513) 241-7170

http://www.cilo.net/pages/content/contact.html

About Us

CILO is the oldest center for independent living in Ohio serving individuals with disabilities in the Greater Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky region. Founded by individuals with disabilities and chartered in 1977, as a 501© 3 non-profit, the center is governed, managed, and staffed by a majority of professionals with disabilities. We serve individuals of all ages who have physical, sensory, cognitive, and/or psychological disabilities. We are agents of social change and the practical application of the disability civil rights and independent living movement. We help people become self reliant and live independently to ensure their full inclusion in our community.

Our mission is to break down architectural and attitudinal barriers, build bridges to understanding, and create options, and choices in the continuous process of  empowerment of individuals with disabilities.

Beech Acres

http://www.beechacres.org/

6881 Beechmont Avenue

Cincinnati, Ohio 45230

(513) 231-6630

(513) 624-0134 fax

 

Parent Resource Info Line (513) 751-0400

Beech Acres is a child-focused family serivces agency in Greater Cincinnati dedicated to providing effective programs which preserve and strengthen families, enabling their children to live more productive lives.

 

Services Provided :

  • For the Love of Kids , a Beech Acres conference on practical parenting, debuted in November 1999. The 2000 Conference will be held November 4&5. It brings parents together to focus on their primary role in raising their children.
  • Family Outreach Services offers counseling, education, and support to families in crisis to help keep the child in the home.
  • ParentSource Info Line is a telephone question and answer line for the questions that all parents have about raising their kids.
  • Group Services includes support groups for single parents, stepfamilies, children whose parents are divorced, and divorced or divorcing families.
  • Every Child Succeeds is a program for first-time mothers that provides support from before the baby's birth until three years of age.
  • Beech Acres Family Center provides child development and family support specialists to help families strengthen relationships by teaching cooperative problem solving through crisis intervention, counseling, parent education, respite services, and other activities for children and parents.
  • Mediation and Conflict Resolution Services are available to help families work out the problems of divorce, stepfamily conflict, and parent/teen disputes.
  • Helping Children Cope with Divorce is a collaboration with Hamilton and Clermont Counties' Domestic Relations Court to provide a class that gives divorcing parents the tools they need to help their children work through divorce in the family.
  • Child and Family Therapy provides individual and family therapy to help families solve problems.
  • Therapeutic Foster Care is for children who have emotional and behavioral problems because of abuse or neglect.
  • Creative Connections provides highly individualized treatment planning for almost 300 of the most troubled children in the community.
  • Ujima (a Swahili word for collective work and responsibility) is a collaborative effort that provides day treatment and academic services for children who have severe behavioral problems.
  • Therapeutic Mentoring for Children and Adolescents provides therapeutic mentors who teach specific skills to help a child with behavioral problems to be successful.

    Vision :
    Beech Acres strongly believes in the fundamental dignity of the family. They are a beacon to children at risk, their families, and all who care about them.

International Family Resource Center

200 McFarland Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
Phone: (513) 721-7660

http://www.servingfamilies.org/default.htm

 

Family Service engages children, families and adults as partners so they achieve educational, emotional and occupational success. We collaborate with community partners, using our expertise and theirs, to provide a continuum of services. Together, we strengthen our community—one child, one family, one adult at a time.

Vision:

Family Service of Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky will be the social service agency of choice for all families in our area.

Our clients become proud, self-sufficient, contributing members of their families and communities.

The community values us for continually raising the overall quality of family life, and enthusiastically supports our efforts.

Values:

We value families as a key pillar of strong communities and a successful society.

We appreciate that families are made up of a multiplicity of types.

We value the power of strong family relationships.

We value high quality services that demonstrate respect for our clients’ uniqueness.

We value learning and development for our employees, our clients and our other partners.

Family Service annually provides client services for almost 6,000 children, individuals and their families throughout the Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky area. In addition, we reach more than 20,000 individuals in our community through television, radio, written materials and speaking engagements

 

English for Speakers of Other Languages 

Beginning, intermediate and advanced English classes for immigrants, refugees and international visitors.

For more information: Call (513) 721-7660

Language Bank

Translation and interpretation services in 98 languages and dialects for individuals, corporations, courts, law firms and others on a fee-for-service basis. for more information about the Language Bank.

Employment Services

Pre-employment services and job search assistance for immigrants and refugees, and assistance for employers in effectively utilizing these persons as workers. for more information about Employment Services.

Private Tutoring for Foreign Languages- Spanish, French, Arabic

For private tutoring information. If have an interest in a language not listed, please contact Jasna Secic at 513-354-5702 or email us

 

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