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Tent city to rise with a purpose

The organized camp for 250 homeless people opens Dec. 1.

By SHERRI DAY, Times Staff Writer
Published October 19, 2007


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Where refuse and overgrown brush once dotted a 10-acre vacant lot in unincorporated Pinellas County, a campground has emerged.

It is the future home of Pinellas Hope, a site that will offer the homeless a place to live once winter sets in.

The campsite, which could house as many as 250 homeless adults beginning Dec. 1, is a pilot project initiated by Catholic Charities and the Roman Catholic Diocese of St. Petersburg in response to last year's tent city debacle.

Then, St. Petersburg police took down the homeless tents with box cutters, a slashing that garnered national attention. This time, the tent city will spring up with the blessing of city and county officials.

Since Catholic Charities president Frank Murphy and the diocese pitched the idea to local government and social service agencies in September, it has received almost unilateral support.

The diocese provided the land, and the city donated workers to clear it. County human services officials pledged $460,000 to help with operating costs. Private donors chipped in more than $500,000 to outfit the land with sewer and other utility lines. A local dry cleaner offered to clean laundry, and members of Religious Community Services said they would donate more than 50 nights of cooked meals.

"If we can provide a place for the homeless to sleep, take a shower, go to the bathroom and get a meal, that's better than sleeping on the street," Murphy said. "Nobody can argue with that."

Still, the project has detractors. Pinellas Hope's new neighbors, owners of salvage yards, trucking and construction companies and a shipping business, expressed mixed feelings about the coming tent city. They cited theft and safety concerns.

"I personally don't object to the project," said Greg Nichols, who owns a construction company across the street from Pinellas Hope. But "it's not a good site for people to live on. ... The only positive to the site is it's out of sight."

Undaunted, organizers say there is much to do before opening day. They must purchase tents and round up more volunteer groups to provide nightly meals.

Catholic Charities, which expects to donate about $150,000 to the effort, also must figure out how to get people to the site, which is tucked in an industrial area off of 49th Street and 126th Avenue and sits near the end of a dead-end street.

Organizers plan to use vans and buses to shuttle people from hangouts such as Williams Park in downtown St. Petersburg. They also plan to give residents bus passes because of the site's proximity to a bus stop.

On Thursday morning, Murphy and Catholic Charities' chief operating officer Sheila Lopez surveyed the site, which would open Dec. 1 and close April 30.

They envision a fenced-in area where trailers and modular structures line the perimeter, housing social services agencies, showers, toilets, computers and laundry facilities.

A large tent, situated in the middle of the campground, could serve as a place for residents to eat, watch television and unwind. Personal sleeping tents will likely sit toward the back of the lot, far from the public eye. If things go well, Catholic Charities may consider running the program again next winter. If the pilot fails, the agency will likely discontinue the effort, Murphy said.

Social services agencies, which largely laud the effort, say they will watch it closely.

"There's kind of an unknown for all of us," said Sarah Snyder, executive director of the Pinellas County Coalition for the Homeless. "The goal is not to just house (the homeless) for four months, but to get them off the street and to some more permanent housing before Pinellas Hope closes down."

Times researcher Carolyn Edds contributed to this report. Sherri Day can be reached at sday@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3405.

FAST FACTS: For more details
To read more about Pinellas Hope, visit www.pinellashope.org or call (727) 893-1313.

 

[Last modified October 19, 2007, 01:57:02]


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Comments on this article
by pat 10/22/07 05:18 PM
congrations catholic charities, finally a group that is practing there faith. i applaud you for this most charitable act and pray for your success. may God bless you all. pat
by tim 10/19/07 10:44 PM
Bravo. Now maybe the City will "grow a set" and clean these skuz-beau's out of Williams Park.
by Suzy 10/19/07 01:48 PM
Slipped another one right under our noses again. Why didn't we as the taxpayers have a right to vote on such a decision. These are our tax dollars they are using. It's not my responsiblity to support these people.
by faye 10/19/07 12:20 PM
Oh yay!!... a place where drunken pillagers can rest their tired feet! What's next ...a "Tent City" for sexual offenders who have no where to go? Gimee a break!!
by MS 10/19/07 11:57 AM
This is right next to the UPS delivery hub that handles most of Pinellas County. How nice is that, homeless people posing a security risk for all that freight. There is not a fence or any guards around UPS to keep people out. Check your packages.
by John 10/19/07 11:29 AM
Wow, sounds like I'll be coming to St.Pete for the winter....3 hots and a cot with free transportation! Woohoo!
by Hoshi 10/19/07 11:15 AM
Ooh I am so excited - too bad you don't pay this much attention to single working parents or working sick people who have no insurance. Where is this again, I am so proud to be part of Pinellas county, murders, tent cities, NOT!!!
by Nick 10/19/07 10:57 AM
What an utterly ridiculous idea. This will turn into an unmanageable nightmare as hoards of homeless descend on our area. You think they'll stop at 250? HA, ya right...
by justme 10/19/07 10:42 AM
4 months? do the math try 5 months. After a 125% increase to my home owners insurance making a nice mortgage increase of $400 (and a single parent) where do I sign up?
by Jeremy 10/19/07 09:47 AM
This sounds like an absolute cluster...don't get me wrong, it's a kind thought, but sounds like something the community and homeless will object to, not enough people to panhandle from out in the middle of nowhere...ON A DEAD END ROAD NO LESS..IRONY?
by john 10/19/07 09:45 AM
I can see where after a long day of exhausting panhandling these people would need a large communal tent that will help them "unwind"
by Bill 10/19/07 08:10 AM
I wonder will they also give them a free bus pass, so they can go back to Williams park for the day of partying and panhandling then come back at night to sleep it off? They need to collect all the homeless in this city and ship them off to camp
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