Ober Community Center, a cog of St. Paul's historic Rondo neighborhood for decades, will close at the end of the year.
Union Gospel Mission Twin Cities, which owns and operates Ober, is shifting resources to its core mission of serving people who are homeless and suffering from addiction and mental illness, said Dan Furry, communications and marketing manager.
"Ober in its day was really popular and was the hub of a lot of activity when community centers played an important role in family life," Furry said. "But, over the past two or three decades, the culture has changed a little bit and the numbers haven't been great. We came to the conclusion that residential programming and recovery programming is really our core strength, and has been since our beginning in 1902."
Floyd Smaller said generations of young people were molded by the years spent playing football, basketball, boxing and wrestling at Ober. Smaller himself gravitated to the Ober Boys Club after his family moved to St. Paul from Arkansas in 1943. His football, track and basketball coaching career spanned decades at Mechanic Arts and Central high schools.
"I'm stunned. Shocked. Angry," Smaller said about Ober's closing. "I started going down there at 10 years old. It was my first initiation into the athletic world. They've always been there. I don't know why they'd close."
It's not the cost, Furry said. Rather, he said, the organization wants to better focus on serving homeless individuals and families, many of whom are ravaged by mental illness and addiction. Union Gospel Mission recently added a mental health clinic to the basement of its men's campus. Optometry and chiropractic care also have been added to the mission's homeless services, which include life skills, job search training and occupational programs.
The mission is also beefing up services for children who share the trauma of their homeless mothers, Furry said. Money will be shifted from Ober's after-school and summer programs for neighborhood middle school and high school students to hire five new staff members to work with young children, including a child therapist, a child development teacher and a mental health assistant.
The city of St. Paul runs 26 community centers, including a sparkling new Frogtown facility a mile away. Still, Furry and program director Ed Irwin acknowledge Ober's closing is a blow for the neighborhood — beyond the eight Ober staff members losing their jobs at the end of the year. Staff members are working to connect young people with staff and services at other centers and programs, Irwin said.