Standing beneath the smoke-drenched skies outside the Francis Drake Hotel on Christmas morning, Dominique Howell began to feel overwhelmed with fear and uncertainty.
Two days earlier, Howell, 32, learned that she was pregnant, and now the apartment that took her months to find was ablaze with flames shooting out the windows. No one could tell her when or if she could return to the building to grab her few belongings; or how she would find a new place with a poor credit score amid a severe shortage of affordable rental units.
"I feel like a refugee," said Howell, who was busy sweeping the floors of a crowded room at Bethlehem Baptist Church in downtown Minneapolis on Thursday. She and more than 100 others evacuated from the hotel slept there Christmas night. "It's hard to wrap my head around the fact that I've lost everything and there is no plan for a better living situation."
Even before the flames ignited the Drake Hotel in a Christmas Day blaze, there was a state of crisis for people struggling to find affordable housing.
The county's population of homeless adults has surged 40% in the past year, and the housing crisis had grown so dire that Gov. Tim Walz had just announced a new public-private sector partnership to secure millions of dollars to expand the state's emergency shelter capacity.
And then came the fire, destroying an aging building that served as the county's only overflow shelter for families with children experiencing homelessness.
Fire crews finally vanquished the blaze at 416 S. 10th St. midday Thursday, but not before the city of Minneapolis used its emergency authority to order the demolition of part of the hotel, which opened in 1926.
Overnight, a crisis worsens
Overnight, a vital piece of the emergency shelter system — a facility that, at its peak, housed 133 families who might otherwise be sleeping in the streets — was gone, and city and county officials were scrambling to find new transitional housing within an already overstretched system.