Another Shelter Shut-Down? Ella Hill Hutch in Danger of Closure

Ron and Russ

Ella Hill Hutch Community Center employees don’t know if—or when—they will be forced to close their shelter for homeless people. As of two weeks ago, the staff were bracing for a June 29 closing date, but no final decision on the Center’s fate has yet been made, said shelter manager Trina Johnson. This comes in the wake of the March 31 closing of Buster’s Place, the city’s only 24-hour resource center for homeless people.

Johnson also said that Mayor Gavin Newsom doesn’t realize the effect the possible closing would have on staff and people staying there.

“Clients talk to us and feel safe. We have a community,” Johnson said. Once homeless herself, she also said she wouldn’t turn people away.

Neither Human Service Agency Director Trent Rohrer nor Dariush Kayhan, the Mayor’s homeless policy director, have responded to requests for comment. Ella Hill Hutch, located in San Francisco’s Western Addition neighborhood, is also a youth center that provides education, crime and violence prevention programs, employment, recreation and other community involvement programs for low- and moderate-income residents.

Johnson said the space might be used for nighttime activities for neighborhood youth, though she doubts anybody would come for a midnight basketball game.

Up to 100 people line up nightly outside the center as early as 8:30 p.m. to sleep on mats in the gymnasium from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. Most of them secure a spot through the City’s computerized reservation system, CHANGES; however, some disabled people, recent hospital discharges, and people just arriving in town are also accommodated. Those turned away from the center are referred to shelters at 150 Otis St., Episcopal Sanctuary, or Providence Baptist Church.

Shelter monitor Christopher Nolan stood sentry as homeless people picked up their pillows and blankets.

“It’s sad they don’t have a backup [for people to have shelter,]” Nolan said.

Before his current job, Nolan worked for five years at the McMillan Drop-in Center at 39 Fell St. It closed in 2007. He criticized Newsom for promoting the appearance of solving homelessness—citing the Mayor’s appeal for funding in Washington, D.C. last year—without addressing permanent housing needs.

“When everything starts falling like dominoes, and the Mayor goes to D.C. and brags on how the shelter system is good… why don’t they call him on his shit?” Nolan said. “Just because people are homeless doesn’t make them hopeless.”

Homeless people like Warren McCormack also disapprove of the closing. McCormack has been homeless for two months. As a bipolar SSI recipient, he said shelters should provide supportive services, such as in-house psychological counseling. “Everybody’s materialistic out here,” McCormack said, citing increases in housing costs. He also observed a racial dynamic as to who could afford living in the city. “Over by Glide [Memorial Church in the Tenderloin], not one black person owns a home there. There’s a lot of tensions,” he said.

Roy Hill, a thin, graying Massachusetts native who is seven years homeless, said hotels could house homeless people. “They need to get SROs for everybody, instead of closing the Center,” he said.

“I know a lot of people depend on this place,” said Cat, a San Francisco native who returned from Portland, Oregon on April 2. He said he is optimistic about his housing situation because he has family in the city.

“I’m glad they have these places,” Cat said. “If they leave this place, one door closes and another one opens.”

“It really affects me and the clients [at Ella Hill Hutch], and [Newsom] really needs to hear us speak,” Johnson said.

T.J.

One Response to “Another Shelter Shut-Down? Ella Hill Hutch in Danger of Closure”

  1. charles pitts Says:

    Ella hill huch is the bottom-rung shelter
    For the city and county of San Francisco
    It’s horrid that you try to say anything positive
    about these people

    if your subscribed to sf homeless yahoo group
    you’ll hear people talk about the workers smoking crack cocaine
    while on duty (nice to know what your tax dollars are paying for )

    you have people saying they worked at 39 fell
    this should be a flag that they have a fetish
    for abusing people
    that can’t fight back

    39 fell was closed because of it’s vile conditions
    like racial slurs panted on the walls and doors
    open drainage pipes
    gang graffiti

    Robert pitts ( director of 39 fell ) hit me
    when I came in to help them
    keep 39 fell open
    ( is this the type of staff you want over you )
    ( this town’s poverty pimps think so )

    berry drewmore worked at 39 fell
    then central city hospality house
    but got fired when he called the clients an slur
    ( a 39 FELL model employee )

    back to Ella hill hutch
    ella would-a have to comply to
    THE STANDARDS OF CARE
    That just passed
    What I know is that ella
    would have to give the people
    eight hours of sleep
    people enter at 10
    and
    get a wakeup mat kick at 5
    dose this give people eight hours

    when I stayed at ella
    it felt like they did not want to turn on the heat
    they gave me a lint infested blanket with
    more holes then cloth

    what’s missing from this story is
    why ella is closing
    instead of treating the clients with respect
    providing soap and toilet paper
    and eight hours of sleep
    they close
    how compassionate ella

    gaven did not close this place
    ella closed this place
    maybe they are offended
    they can’t abuse people anymore

    the STANDARDS OF CARE
    has changed everything

    I’m more worried about
    where the money for these places will go

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