Office hours are 8:00am to 4:30pm Monday through Friday. Counseling services and case management are provided by appointment in person with the option of virtual telehealth services. Applications for emergency utility assistance will be accepted via our online application. The application opens every Monday at 10:00am (Tuesday if Monday is a holiday or is otherwise indicated). Once we have received the maximum number of applications for the week, the application will close until the following week. Please call our office at (580) 237-7352 with any questions.
The application form can be found here.
Meals served
First Presbyterian Church – 502 W. Maine St. on Saturdays from 11 AM to noon
Central Christian Church Sunday evenings from 430 to 6 PM
Mobile meal $67 per month delivered – RSVP at 580-233-5914
Salvation Army – 516 N. Independence – every Monday-Sunday 6 to 6:30 PM
Our Daily Bread 616 W. Randolph – 580-242-5718 Monday through Friday 7 AM to noon
University Place – 2107 E. Broadway on Monday at 6 PM except first Monday of every month
Wheatheart nutrition – 1225 S. Cleveland-580-366-9178 M-F at noon 60 and above.
Groceries
Bethany United Methodist Church – 931 E. Maple – 580-237-6611–1st and second Wednesday of the month from 9 AM to 11 AM
Loaves and fishes – 701 E. Maine Monday and Wednesday 1 to 4 PM and Tuesday and Thursday 3 to 6 PM
North Garland Church of Christ – 703 N. Garland – 580-237-4658– 2nd, third and fourth Thursday from 930 to 11:30 AM – one time per family per month
Salvation army – 516 N. Independence – 580–237–1910 – groceries every four months by appointment only
Other community resources
Area agency on aging – 202 W. Broadway, Ste.A – 580-237-2236
Catholic Charities – 710 W. Main St. – 580-237-7352
CDSA – 114 S. Independence – 580-242-6600
Diaper bank by CDSA – 114 S. Independence – by appointment only – 580-242-6131
Community care and homeless Ministry 815 W. Maine – 580-237-4800
Department of human services – 2405 Mercer Dr. – 580–548–2100
Enid community clinic – 1106 E. Broadway –580-233-5300
Enid Street Outreach – 580-603-4896
Enid transit – 580–616–7355
Garfield County health Department – 2501 Mercer Dr. – 580-233–0650
Great salt plains clinic -231 S. 30th St.-- 580–233-2900
Habitat for Humanity – 630 E. Birch – 580–237–0114
Hope outreach parenting resource center – 815 – West Broadway – 580–237–2292
Legal aid services of Oklahoma – 1888–534–5243
Northwest Center for behavioral health – 702 N. Grand – 580–234–3791
RSVP – 580–233–5941
University Place- 2107 E. Broadway – clothing – Monday 3 to 6 PM and Friday 9 AM to noon
Willow Rd. Christian Church 580–234–2119
Workforce Oklahoma 114 S. Independence – 580-234–0643
Youth and Family Services -605 West Oxford 580-233-7220
Emergency Shelter
Salvation Army - 516 North Independence- 580-237-1910
Mercy House - 1714 S. 4th Enid, OK - Will pick up at Our Daily Bread at 4:30
YWCA women's shelter -525 S. Quincy 580-234-7644
A Very Giving Christmas
by Christopher Aderhold, the Sooner Catholic
“We can never have too many Legos!”
Since 2002, as autumn turns to winter, the conference room at the Catholic Charities in Enid is taken over by heaping piles of clothes and toys, including countless boxes of Legos. Eighty kids in the Enid area will be the recipients of those items. Those kids would go without the joy of presents this Christmas if not for Stacy Kurtz, Laura Maixner and their program: A Very Giving Christmas.
“There’s something very special about helping these kids,” said Kurtz said, who serves as the director of the regional Catholic Charities office in Enid and started A Very Giving Christmas more than two decades ago.
“This program spreads hope and joy each Christmas season by ensuring that kids, who otherwise wouldn’t get gifts, have a very Merry Christmas,” she said.
Recipients are chosen through an application process that opens each year in October. Parents are asked to include clothes sizes and a gift list for each child. There are new, trendy gifts on the lists each year, as well as many gifts, like Legos, that have stood the test of time.
“We look forward to this program all year,” Kurtz said.
And when the calendar turns to January, they begin shopping all over again. Kurtz and Maixner stock up on those gifts that are wished for year after year. As for what the new, trendy wish list items will be, it’s anyone’s guess.
“The last few weeks before Christmas are a sprint to ensure the wishes of all 80 kids are fulfilled,” Kurtz said.
In addition to clothes and gifts, each family receives a gift card for groceries. This Christmas, those 80 kids will not only have presents under their trees, they’ll also have pantries stocked.
An aspect of the program that brings Kurtz a great amount of joy is the opportunity parents have to “pay it forward,” ideally contributing with their time.
“There’s a dignity to this program that I really love,” Kurtz shared. “For each child that receives gifts, parents are encouraged to give back, to volunteer an hour to a local charity.”
According to Kurtz, there are many examples of parents who, after serving their one hour, return again and again to volunteer more of their time. The gratitude they feel inspires them to continue serving, to pass along their joy to others. Organizations like the Salvation Army and Our Daily Bread always welcome the extra volunteers.
Catholic Charities in Oklahoma City conducts a similar program each year, coincidentally also named A Very Giving Christmas. More than 70 young people in the metro area receive gifts each Christmas, many of them are the children of women active at the Oklahoma City and Norman Sanctuary Women’s Development Centers. The two Sanctuary Centers serve homeless and at-risk women and children.
Similar to the Enid program, it’s not just the kids that receive gifts each Christmas. The women who receive support at the Oklahoma City Sanctuary are treated to lunch at Cattleman’s Steakhouse. The meal is generously sponsored by the parishioners of Christ the King Catholic Church. In addition to a delicious meal, the women walk away with gifts of their own, also provided by the parishioners of Christ the King.
In Norman, the women are treated to a meal at Saint Joseph Catholic Church. Parishioners cook a traditional Christmas meal, serving it to the women in the church gym. Decorated in the spirit of the season, and with Christmas music playing throughout, the setting to provides an uplifting experience to the many women who attend.
“The Christmas season can be difficult for these families,” said Teresa Flannery, the senior director of social services at Catholic Charities who heads up the efforts each year. “Each of them has a unique set of challenges and difficulties in their lives.
“This program is a light in their lives.”
Director of Enid Regional Office
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 580-237-7352
Case Manager Enid Regional Office
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 580-237-7352