Project Weber/RENEW

Project Weber/RENEW is a harm reduction organization in Providence, Rhode Island established in 2016 by the merger of Project RENEW and Project Weber. The organization is staffed entirely by people who have directly experienced mental health issues, substance abuse and/or sex work.

It plans to open an "overdose prevention center" in early 2024, which will be the first supervised injection site to be state regulated in the US.

Creation of Project RENEW
In 2006, Colleen Daley Ndoye started Project Revitalizing & Engaging Neighborhoods by Empowering Women (RENEW), which connects women sex workers with social services and substance abuse treatment. Project RENEW has been credited with reducing arrests in Pawtucket.

Creation of Project Weber
In 2008, Project Weber was founded by Rich Holcomb and James Waterman, in Providence, as the first supportive services in America to exclusively serve male sex workers. The project was named in honor of Roy Weber, a sex worker who was found murdered in Providence in 2003. Project Weber opened its first drop-in center in 2013. After two years of running the drop-in center and nearly seven years of complete abstinence from drugs and alcohol, Holcomb relapsed and resigned as director of Project Weber. The merger into Project Weber/RENEW occurred, in part, to sustain the work of Project Weber, after Holcomb's departure as director. Holcomb continues to be involved in the organization.

Merger into Project Weber/RENEW
In 2016, Project Weber which served male sex workers and Project RENEW which served female sex workers merged to become Project Weber/RENEW in a hope to gather more funds and help more people. Project Weber/RENEW is funded by the Rhode Island Department of Health. Weber/RENEW's interventions include education, distribution of harm reduction supplies, peer-led street outreach, addressing basic needs, HIV prevention testing, support groups, and case management.

Services
In 2021, Weber/RENEW began handing out harm reduction supplies in Kennedy Plaza. The organization runs two drop-in centers run by workers in recovery. One in Providence and another in Pawtucket. Additionally, the organization runs a mobile outreach van in Providence, Central Falls, and Pawtucket.

In partnership with the organization CODAC Behavioral Health, it intends to open an overdose prevention center at 349 Huntington Ave in Providence, a location currently occupied by CODAC. After the controversial announcement of the supervised consumption center's opening, some private donors terminated donations to CODAC.

It is one of the largest distributors of Narcan in the state.

COVID-19 pandemic response
In 2020 and 2021, Weber/RENEW was one of the only organizations in Rhode Island to continue in person harm reduction and outreach work, despite the risk of transmission at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. In response to the pandemic, the organization expanded services to meet clients' basic needs. Weber/RENEW also started distributing COVID masks and cleaning supplies, hosting vaccination clinics, and sharing educational information about COVID and vaccines.

Collaboration with schools
In January 2022, Project Weber/ RENEW taught a Community Leadership in Nonviolence and Substance Use Prevention class for students at Blackstone Academy Charter School, in partnership with U.S. Attorney Zachary A. Cunha, Local Initiatives Support Corporation Rhode Island, and the Nonviolence Institute.

Advocacy of supervised injection sites
In July 2022, Rhode Island became the first state in America to legalize supervised drug consumption sites.

In November 2022, Project Weber/RENEW and CODAC Behavioral Healthcare submitted a joint proposal to Rhode Island's Executive Office of Health and Human Services for funding to open a supervised injection site on Huntington Avenue in Providence. Two million dollars in funding for the project will come from settlement money the state of Rhode Island was paid from opioid makers.

Outreach in Kennedy Plaza
Project Weber/RENEW focuses much of their outreach on the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority (RIPTA) bus terminal, Kennedy Plaza. Kennedy Plaza has one of the highest rates of overdoses in Providence.

Awarded grants
In 2018, Miriam Hospital received a $2.5 million federal grant to partner with Project Weber/RENEW and the Rhode Island Public Health Institute to create Rhode Island's first substance use treatment program for gay and bisexual, Black and Latino men. In 2018, Project Weber/RENEW was awarded $10,000 from the Rhode Island Foundation for advocacy and training, as well as to connect high-risk transgender men and women with health and prevention services.

PrideFest honor
In June 2022, Project Weber/RENEW was named Grand Marshals for the return of PrideFest and the Illuminated Night Parade in Providence.