02/14/2026
When professor Stephen Schock challenged his College for Creative Studies students to design something that filled a real need, Veronika Scott knew exactly what she wanted to solve. In Detroit, one in 42 residents was homeless — and she saw them every day.
For five months, the twenty-one-year-old spent three evenings a week at a warming center, listening. She watched people brace against brutal winters in clothing that wasn’t enough. She heard what they actually needed.
Her idea was simple and powerful: a coat that transformed into a sleeping bag at night, then converted into a shoulder bag by day. Waterproof. Windproof. Storage in the sleeves. Designed not just for warmth — but for dignity.
The first version weighed twenty pounds and took eighty hours to make after she taught herself to sew. It was rough. But she refused to let it end as a class grade.
She refined it. Spent her own money. Took feedback from people sleeping outside. Adjusted it through a freezing Detroit winter. Recognition followed — but something still felt incomplete.
Then a woman at the shelter said eight words that changed everything:
“We don’t need coats. We need jobs.”
That was the shift.
In 2011, Veronika launched The Empowerment Plan — hiring women from homeless shelters to manufacture the coats themselves. Sixty percent of their workweek focused on production. The other forty percent addressed whatever stood in their way: GEDs, driver’s licenses, financial literacy, domestic violence support.
People told her it would fail. Not because the coat was bad — but because, they said, “you can’t rely on homeless women.”
They were wrong.
Within weeks, employees moved into permanent housing. After two years of stability and skill-building, they transitioned into other jobs or launched businesses of their own. One hundred percent maintained stable housing a year later.
The coats improved too. Production dropped from five and a half hours to under two. Each $150 coat is sponsored and distributed free through outreach partners across all 50 states and 22 countries — from disaster zones to refugee camps.
By 2024, the numbers spoke clearly:
Over 100 people employed.
More than 200 families lifted out of homelessness.
95,000 coats distributed.
Soon, they’ll deliver their 100,000th.
And yet homelessness in America continues to rise. Demand grows. Nearly 2,000 people wait for coat sponsorship.
Still, The Empowerment Plan moves forward — investing in local manufacturing, in people, in second chances. Veronika’s belief is simple: people are not interchangeable parts. They are capable of far more than society assumes.
Every coat leaving that Detroit factory carries two stories. The woman who stitched it — rebuilding her life. And the person who will wear it — surviving another cold night.
One coat at a time.
One job at a time.
One life at a time.
Proof that dignity and opportunity can be sewn into something strong enough to change everything.