 Appalachian Wireless proudly brings you unlimited data. Unlimited data is only $80 a month for a single line. Four lines as low as $200. Better service? Bigger savings? That's today's Appalachian Wireless. An East Kentucky network company. Get a speed slow to 25 gigabytes per line to 512 kilobits for phones and tablets. And 15 gigabytes for motors. See store for more details. There's no question the economy in eastern Kentucky has taken a hit and many people are struggling. Some to the point of actually finding themselves without a place to live. And even though Pikeville does have a homeless shelter, officials there also do what they can for the people who can't or won't stay there by delivering supplies. Right now we're at a homeless camp that we visit to drop off donations that come in. Things like blankets, flashlights, food, just things that sustain people. You know, canned meats, any kind of things that you would use at your house they use here. Anna Coleman with the West Care Emergency Shelter in Pikeville says she worries about the homeless all year long, but knows how dangerous things can be in the winter. The temperatures have been in the teens and below. So to think about a person sleeping like this at night time, it's just, it's unfathomable that people in our world has to live homeless. She says while there are beds available at the shelter, sometimes circumstances in people's lives prevent them from going there. A lot of times it's mental illness or as little as not having an ID. You know, IDs cost $12. When you're a homeless person, $12 is an astronomical amount. At the camp we visited, the man who lives there was gone, which is normal for this time of year. To sustain yourself, you have to go somewhere to get warm, maybe take a shower. And the shelter allows that. They can come in and take showers and eat and things like that. So a lot of times they come over there and visit us and that's how we find out about where their camps are and how we can help them. And from time to time, Coleman makes deliveries, bringing bags full of supplies she knows they need, like flashlights, batteries, canned food and blankets. These blankets, the ones we laid down today are covered in this tent. So, you know, it's amazing that this person has used this stuff and I'll keep doing it as long as I see this kind of stuff. Coleman says supplies are always needed and anyone wishing to donate is encouraged to drop things off at the shelter located on the Pikeville Bypass. Because to her, this is personal. When you have people like this that need somebody, I want to be that somebody. And I encourage everybody else to come forward and be that somebody. No matter if they think the society has given up on them, we will never give up on them. Never. In Pikeville, I'm Shannon Deskins, the KB News.