Ten minutes after Listening House opened on a recent morning, 20 people already were eating doughnuts, settling into chairs and chatting with volunteers. An hour later, more than 50 filled space at the drop-in center that serves homeless and other needy people in the basement of a Dayton's Bluff church.
Starting April 2, by decree of the St. Paul City Council last December, Listening House is not supposed to allow any additional visitors after the first 20 arrive. It's a condition that Listening House Executive Director Cheryl Peterson has no intention of meeting.
"I'm not going to close the door," she said.
First Lutheran Church Pastor Chris Olson Bingea, who invited the nonprofit to her church basement last summer, has her back. Providing a place of warmth and welcome to all is part of First Lutheran's mission, Olson Bingea said.
"They're not shutting the door and we're with them in that," the pastor said. "They have a lawyer and so do we."
The potential legal skirmish between the city and Listening House comes on the heels of complaints from church neighbors after the center moved to the East Side last year. For 22 years, Listening House had been located in the former Mary Hall at St. Joseph's Hospital, but was displaced by Catholic Charities' Higher Ground project.
Olson Bingea, pastor for nearly 14 years, said inviting Listening House was "a no-brainer" for a church that already serves communal meals and conducts a weekly wellness center.
"They do a lot of the same work we have been doing all along," she said. "We knew what they were doing downtown and it very much makes sense for them to move here."