The paper was started in
Boston in 1992 and was the brainchild of
Tim Hobson, who enlisted the aid of twelve other homeless people and one housed advocate, Timothy Harris, who was a member and executive director of
Boston Jobs with Peace. In 1994, Harris would go on to use the model of Spare Change News and the Homeless Empowerment Project to found
Real Change, a street newspaper in
Seattle. The first issue of Spare Change News was published on Friday, May 8, 1992. The newspaper's first managing editor, Tim Hobson, said at its founding that it would be "heavy on politics as well as discussion of homeless empowerment". He also said an important goal was to "put a face on the homeless to show that we're human beings". MIT Professor
Noam Chomsky, together with his friend, the historian
Howard Zinn, were some of the first major supporters of Spare Change News. In June 1993, one of the founders, James L. Shearer, appeared before the
Boston City Council to accept a special commendation on behalf of Spare Change as the newspaper celebrated its one-year anniversary. In July 2002, Spare Change News and the Homeless Empowerment Project hosted the Seventh Annual Conference of the
North American Street Newspaper Association. In May 2004, Spare Change News hired journalist Samuel Scott, who was a Boston University graduate as well as former
Boston Courant reporter and Boston Globe editorial assistant, to be its first professional editor. He changed the tone of the paper from advocacy journalism to objective reporting on social issues and revamped it from a black-and-white broadsheet into a color tabloid. He was later executive director of the Homeless Empowerment Project. In October 2010, a
Worcester, Massachusetts edition of Spare Change News was launched. It is a collaboration of Spare Change News and the
Worcester Homeless Action Committee. In July 2011, the newspaper replaced
Adam Sennott with Tom Benner, a former head of the
Massachusetts State House bureau for
The Patriot Ledger as the new editor-in-chief. In August 2012, the
Reverend Osagyefo Uhuru Sekou, a
Pentecostal (
Church of God in Christ) Christian minister, community organizer, and activist who studied religion at
Harvard University and
Union Theological Seminary in New York, joined Spare Change News as Editor-in-Chief. ==See also==