A St. Louis Park housing program for low-income mothers and children is abruptly shutting down much of its operation because of financial problems — even as the need for its services swells.
Perspectives, founded 40 years ago, provides child care, drug treatment and mental health care, and houses residents in a tight-knit complex of five apartment buildings comprising about 50 units in the Louisiana Court cul-de-sac. In mid-December, the organization ended its children's programming and clinical services — but promised residents they would not be displaced from their housing.
Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt called the news "devastating."
"At a time when we're talking about fentanyl, the drug epidemic, juveniles and not enough resources, a program that has been a pillar in the community is not going to be able to provide some of the services that we know had worked?" asked Witt, whose late brother George Bickham worked at Perspectives for two decades. "That is a travesty. I mean, I just don't understand it."
The situation on the Perspectives campus is rapidly evolving. The organization's financial challenges are long term, stemming in part from federal decisions about how and where to fund housing. But the board of directors' decision to wind down the program this holiday was unavoidable amid mounting debt of about $3 million — roughly the size of Perspectives' annual budget.
"We did not have enough money coming in to maintain the staffing that we had or the programming, said Board Member Patricia Weller, "and we don't see being able to cash flow for the foreseeable future."
A high-bar sober community
Perspectives was founded four decades ago by Jeannie Seeley-Smith, who recently retired as CEO.
She ran the campus as a sober refuge for mothers who are dedicated to long-term recovery from addiction and require short-term transitional housing to get there. Applicants are interviewed, male visitors screened. Perspectives provided case management, peer support, fully furnished apartments and services like day care and after-school tutoring. The goal: help women graduate with rental history, job experience and their kids on solid academic footing.