A little over a week after city officials they were in the final stages of approving funding for a low-barrier homeless shelter, they canceled the negotiations meant to establish one.
On Jan. 3, Mayor Tishaura Jones鈥 spokesperson Nick Dunne said the safe haven contract was in 鈥減re-approval鈥 and 鈥渟hould be finalized already, if not very soon.鈥 He even named the provider: Bridge of Hope Ministries, which is based in the city鈥檚 Ville neighborhood. But on Jan. 13, the city emailed Bridge of Hope鈥檚 executive director, Kelli Braggs, to say that the nonprofit was no longer being considered for the funds.
鈥淲e were actually in the process of hiring when we found out that the contract was being rescinded,鈥 Braggs said on Friday鈥檚 St. Louis on the Air. 鈥淭his was a total shock.鈥
St. Louis Director of Human Services Yusef Scoggin said the city backed out of negotiations because its proposed shelter was not low-barrier and would not operate 24/7, so it could not be considered a true safe haven. To fund a safe haven that didn鈥檛 follow the application guidelines would be a 鈥渕isuse of funds,鈥 Scoggin said.
鈥淸It would have] provided hardship for individuals as they have to move from one location to another,鈥 he said.
But Braggs said she had never promised a 24/7 operation and had been proceeding at the city鈥檚 directive with a plan that relied on tag-teaming with a second nonprofit. 鈥淎t no time did it ever come up that there was a second guess of whether or not we met that criteria,鈥 she said.
Bridge of Hope was the only safe haven proposal submitted to the city, Scoggin said.
Now, providers and volunteers are continuing to operate pop-up safe havens throughout this week鈥檚 winter storms 鈥 and once again, they鈥檙e using private funds to do it. Co-founder of Tent Mission STL Alex Cohen said the safe haven operating at St. Louis University has a 40-person capacity, but 鈥渇or weeks we have had 65 people every night.鈥
Providers say 140 overflow beds are currently not funded by the city. Without more money or volunteer support, they say the situation is not sustainable.
鈥淲e've already lost a few people on the streets from freezing to death,鈥 Braggs said. 鈥淎nd it's very likely that we may lose some more. There are not enough beds; there are not enough service providers.鈥
Even transportation to existing beds has been an issue. On Thursday evening, as the city was blanketed by snow and temperatures remained dangerously cold, city officials closed the city-operated warming bus that ferries people to shelters with open capacity on cold nights.
With roads in terrible condition Thursday, the mayor鈥檚 spokesperson Nick Dunne blamed staffing shortages. Once again, volunteers say they scrambled to assist people in need, with many transporting them in their own cars.
Dunne said the warming bus is set to resume operations Friday night.
City officials say they plan to reopen a safe haven application in late February or early March for nearly $1.4 million in federal funds. The city has budgeted more than $43 million of federal coronavirus funding toward homeless services and housing support.
Scoggin said providers with questions about the application should contact his office.
鈥淚 know it鈥檚 not easy to be denied particular funding,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t just may mean the proposals need to be tweaked or modified to be in alignment with the needs identified. We do not want to fund things for just the purposes of funding things.鈥
Since the city is the largest funding source for homeless services providers, Braggs said she will put 鈥減ersonal feelings to the side鈥 and will re-apply for city funds in the future.
鈥淚 do fear moving forward, if we do a contract in the future, I understand the city can always change their mind,鈥 Braggs said. 鈥淭hat's very scary.鈥
If you need to find shelter or need to assist someone in finding shelter, city officials say to call 211.
鈥鈥 brings you the stories of St. Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region. The show is hosted by and produced by , , , and . Jane Mather-Glass is our production assistant. The audio engineer is .