HomeMy WebLinkAboutUNITED WAY HOUSING SERVICES DAY CENTER - PDP - 30-06 - MEDIA - CORRESPONDENCE (3)Suntlay.
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ay, June 25, 2006
s :.h ♦ Fort Collins Coloradoan
less editor: Tom Johnson, 224-7740 E-mail: BusinessNews@coloradoan.com
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Homeless help in works
Courtesy of United Way of Larimer County
A rendering of the Housing Services Day Center shows
what the building will look like when it is finished.
Funding drives under way for 2 projects
By CHRISTINE McMANUS
ChristineMcManus@mloradoan.com
The Open Door Mission
in northern Old Town is
beginning an $800,000
capital campaign to expand
its homeless shelter, de-
spite several false starts
and tough competition for
donations. :
A separate capital cam-
paign is under way to fund
a $1.6 million Housing Ser-
vices Day Center for
homeless and nearly
homeless people. The
United Way; local govern-
orado, so have the prob-
Open Door shelter nearby,
ments; faith -based,, hous-
lems.. of homelessness,, do-
in exchange for the mis-
ing, nonprofit and other
mestic violence, single
sion's existing property.
human service interests
mothers in need, mental
But that deal fell through
during the past year raised
health cases and the need
when The Open Door at-
$1 million of the $1.6 mil-
for drug and alcohol treat-
torney and director began
lion needed for the center
ment services.:
reading the 3-inch-thick Te-
at Conifer Street and Blue
gal contract;, said the Rev.
Spruce Drive.
False starts
Richard Thebo.
The Open Door and Unit-
Thebo is the founder,
ed Way partnerships each
Several of The Open
president, CEO and pri-
still need hundreds of thou-
Door's. recent. attempts to
mary paid staff member at
sands of dollars in donations
expand came up short.
The Open Door Mission,
to achieve their goals.
IIn one attempt, an attor-
316 Jefferson St., formed in
As the population has
ney from outside the region
grown in Northern Col-
offered to build a new
See HOMELESS/Page E3
Homeless
Continued from Page El
1987. Though he would not dis-
close specific donors who give
more than $200,000 every year,
he showed off his tidy, efficient
shelter operation and food bank
that houses about 40 people
each night and serves 400-800
meals a week.
Thebo wants to buy and re-
model the building next door at
324 Jefferson St. into a women's
shelter. His existing women's
shelter has less than 10 beds for
a Larirner County population of
about 274,000 people.
"They made an attempt to
purchase (324 Jefferson St.), but
their loan did not materialize at
that moment, anyway," said Jim-
my Phillips, a Fort Collins resi-
dent who has owned the proper-
ty since 1965.
Phillips declined to disclose
the for -sale price of the building.
Thebo estimates The Open
Door Mission is worth $650,000
to $750,000 but said he does not
want to borrow against the
property.
New approach
Last month, Thebo refreshed
his approach at a homeless shel-
ter conference in Seattle, Wash,
sponsored by the Association
for Gospel Rescue Missions.
Now, he's focused on an
$800,000 capital campaign for a
women's shelter, rather than
loans. Debt payments don't fit
with his business model, which
relies on charity, Thebo said
If he can't buy the building
next door, he will remodel and
expand his property at the cor-
ner of Jefferson and Linden
streets.
The Open Door Mission will
likely kick off its official capital
campaign next month.
The Open Door
vs. United Way partnership
While they compete for dona-
tions, The Open Door and the
partnership building the Hous-
ing Services Day Center differ in
their views about the best ways
to handle homelessness. Leaders
of both groups say their services
are worlds apart.
Specifically, the Day Center
plans to hire five or six paid
caseworkers to help homeless
people connect with various
`Poverty is a culture of its own. To
many people in poverty, any other
way of life is completely foreign.
What I try to do is show them another
way of life and tell them that they
don't have to live that way.'
The Rev. Richard Thebo,
founder, president, CEO of The Open Door Mission
programs. Other government
and human service interests
would also participate at the
proposed office -like building.
Thebo said his role is that of
a parent. 'Toverty is a culture of
its own. To many people in
poverty, any other way of life is
completely foreign," Thebo said.
"What I try to do is show them
another way of life and tell them
that they don't have to live that
way."
The Open Door offers two
programs, one religious and one
secular.
A long-term shelter with
work opportunities comprises
the nondenominational Christ-
ian program.
A short-term shelter program
for non-Christian people in need
is also available. The short-term
program includes a day center,
where people can take refuge,
receive mail, make phone calls,
eat and bathe.
"You can't shove God down
their throats," Thebo said. "My
job is to help people, regardless
of whether God has spoken to
them."
Ten to 14 homeless people
work at the shelter, cooking and
cleaning in exchange for room
and board. Some also have day
jobs, but Thebo did not disclose
employers.
The Open Door relies almost
entirely upon community dona-
tions, solicited through a 4,000-
copy monthly newsletter by
Thebo. Holiday editions go out
to 50,000 households, he said.
Newsletter costs are among
the nonprofit's largest, at
$35,000 to $45,000 annually.
Other significant expense cate-
gories include Thebo's salary,
approximately $40,000 annual-
ly, and shelter services provided
at $180,000 to $200,000 per year,
according to tax records filed in
2002 through 2004.
The United Way sees an un-
met need, said executive direc-
tor Gordan Thibedeau, even
with the existence of a third
shelter in Old Town run by
Catholic Charities Northern on
Linden Center Drive.
In addition to the Housing
Services Day Center, Northern
Colorado's primary charity dis-
tributor is beginning to form a
different partnership to build a
separate homeless shelter. The
United Way might work with
Catholic Charities to run its
projects for the homeless.
Within the next month, hous-
ing center leaders will submit of-
ficial plans to the city of Fort
Collins for the Housing Services
Day Center. Once plans are ap-
proved by city officials, con-
struction would take about five
months, Thibedeau said.
Plans for the 10,000-square-
foot building have been contro-
versial in nearby neighborhoods
of north Fort Collins.
"This is not an overnight shel-
ter or a soup kitchen,"
Thibedeau said. "It won't be a
place where people appear to be
hanging out. It's a services cen-
ter, like an office for people who
want to get out of homeless-
ness."
Two of the seven board posi-
tions governing the center will
be for neighborhood representa-
tives.
The United Way is the fiscal
agent for the Housing Services
Day Center. The United Way
has a $5.2 million annual budget
and works with 62 nonprofits
and health and human service
organizations and five local ini-
tiatives.