The Kateri Residence, a south Minneapolis home that has helped hundreds of American Indian women recover from drug and alcohol addiction, could soon be the target of a rescue operation after disclosing that it faces severe financial troubles.
The two-story home, which is run by St. Stephen's Human Services, announced plans this month to close in July after 44 years in operation. It cited years of financial losses and shifts in government funding priorities. The decision alarmed members of the Indian community in the Twin Cities, who voiced concern over losing the 16-bed residence amid a deadly opioid crisis and an increase in people experiencing homelessness.
But a recent Facebook posting about Kateri's closure caught the attention of Patina Park, executive director of the nonprofit Minnesota Indian Women's Resource Center (MIWRC), a Minneapolis nonprofit that provides a range of housing, drug treatment and mental health programs for Indian women and their families.
Days before Christmas, Park and her agency expressed interest in taking over Kateri Residence and even expanding the facility's programs to include more chemical dependency treatment. The offer, however, came with a significant caveat: The MIWRC would have to raise at least $500,000 by next spring to make much-needed structural repairs to the aging brick building at 2408 4th Av. S.
"This program is too important to disappear," Park said. "Our entire population suffers when families can't find stable housing or relapse because they see there's no purpose. … It can't go away. It won't go away."
The MIWRC is not the only agency interested in Kateri Residence.
Gail Dorfman, executive director of St. Stephen's, said two tribal nations and four nonprofits have approached her organization to propose alternative uses for the facility since the closure announcement. A nonprofit housing developer is eyeing the property as a site for low-income housing. Another agency expressed interest in converting the building into a clinic for chemical dependency treatment, she said.
Dorfman said officials at St. Stephen's are weighing all the proposals and expect to make a decision on the building's future by the end of January or early February.