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The Bridge shelter in Cortez gets $20,000 grant for new facility

Plans call for upgrading services for homeless people
The Bridge’s executive director, Laurie Knutson, sits on a bed in one of the rooms where the roof leaks at the homeless shelter. Fundraising on a new facility was kick-started recently by a match/challenge of $20,000.

The Bridge Emergency Shelter has received a grant to start its fundraising campaign for a new facility.

In a May 23 news release, shelter staff announced they had received a match/challenge grant for up to $20,000 from a member of an out-of-state organization who wished to remain anonymous. The plan is to build a new shelter on property the Bridge owns at 735 N. Park St., near its current location in the Montezuma County Justice Building, which is for sale. But the shelter must raise matching funds for the grant, which the staff seeks to do with donations from the community.

Still, the Bridge’s executive director, Laurie Knutson, said the grant is an important first step.

“As far as I know, we’ve never gotten a challenge or matching grant before,” she said. “It’s very exciting to see that someone believes in what we’re doing.”

On Jan. 30, Montezuma County commissioners voted to sell the Justice Building in preparation for moving court proceedings to the new combined courthouse that is set to be completed this year. Since then, the Bridge board of directors has been planning to move to a new location. The property on North Park Street was designated for use by a shelter or detox center, and it remains conveniently close to the police station and Hope’s Soup Kitchen in United Methodist Church.

Knutson said she and the rest of the board want to upgrade their services for the homeless with the move. Early plans for the new shelter call for a 10,000-square-foot, two-story building with a temporary shelter and “sobering space” on the first floor and longer-term housing on the second floor.

The new emergency shelter would not house as many people as the current one, which typically serves about 40 people per night during the winter. Plans for the new location would house 24 men and five women overnight. There would also be room for an additional 14 men and six women in the “sobering space,” which Knutson emphasized is not a medical detox center but just a safe place for intoxicated people to stay until they get sober.

The plans for the new shelter also include supportive housing. The upper floor would contain small apartments for elderly people and others who can’t afford traditional housing but aren’t struggling with addiction or serious criminal charges. Tenants would be required to pay a small rent, which Knutson said would provide some much-needed income for the Bridge. But the residents would have more independence and privacy than if they were staying in the emergency shelter. The Day Labor Center, which operates year-round, would also relocate to the new building.

But the Bridge has a long way to go before the new shelter becomes a reality. Knutson said it will cost “a lot more than $20,000” to complete the building. The Bridge will accept donations to a matching fund for the grant through June. It also plans to apply for a $1 million Colorado Department of Local Affairs grant later this summer, and has submitted grant proposals to three other organizations similar to their out-of-state benefactor.

“In a perfect world, if everything goes well, we would hopefully start (construction) in October,” Knutson said. “But there’s a lot that needs to happen before then.”

An architect is drawing preliminary building plans to include in the DOLA grant application, and she expects to have a more final plan within the next few months. She and the rest of the board want to bring the project before the planning and zoning commission by September.

“It’s a lot for just a few people to do, but it will be so worth it when we can get rid of homelessness for some people,” she said.

How to help

To support the new shelter building project, go to www.thebridgeshelter.org or mail a donation to The Bridge at P.O. Box 56, Cortez by June 30.



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