The Ramsey County Board has agreed to lease Bethesda Hospital in St. Paul and turn it into a homeless shelter, despite neighbors' objections.
Commissioners unanimously approved the 18-month lease with Fairview Health, totaling $1.2 million, at its meeting Tuesday morning.
The hospital building, just north of the State Capitol in the Frogtown neighborhood, will provide a 24-hour shelter and services for 100 homeless people. It would be a low-barrier shelter, housing people who have been unsuccessful in other shelter settings and are often battling addictions.
Residents in the area say they're worried about public safety, including drug dealing and a homeless camp popping up on the hospital grounds. The County Board delayed approval of the lease for a week to address the neighborhood's public safety concerns, and County Manager Ryan O'Connor said Tuesday the lease had been amended to address those concerns.
There will be 24-hour security on site and regular patrols of the property, which includes a private park as well as a hotline staffed 24 hours a day that neighbors may call to report problems.
O'Connor said the county also plans to open an indoor COVID-19 testing site at Bethesda.
Fairview Health announced earlier this month that it will close Bethesda and eliminate 900 jobs across its network of hospitals and clinics to stem financial losses.
All seven commissioners spoke Tuesday in favor of the lease before the vote.