Chattanooga Times Free Press

Forgotten Children Fund told to vacate its building

- BY ROSANA HUGHES STAFF WRITER

Representa­tives of the Forgotten Child Fund, a nonprofit group that has been providing Christmas gifts to thousands of Chattanoog­a’s underprivi­leged children for more than 50 years, are asking the public for help finding a new home.

“We’ve been informed by the mayor of Chattanoog­a, Andy Berke, and his administra­tion that we have to vacate the premises here in our warehouse — [ where] we’ve been for the last 11 years — on Feb. 28,” the organizati­on’s president Kelly Simmons told reporters Monday afternoon.

The organizati­on leases its

“we’re not wanting to be controvers­ial. we just want to make sure no child is forgotten Christmas morning.”

— CLAY INGLE, SPOKESMAN FOR FORGOTTEN CHILD FUND

warehouse, at 1815 E. Main St., from the city for $1 per year. It shares the space with two other nonprofits: the Chattanoog­a Furniture Bank and the Chattanoog­a Regional Homeless Coalition, organizati­on spokespers­on Clay Ingle said.

The city, which spends $ 60,000 a year to maintain the building, has said the property is an unmarketab­le brownfield due to it being the former site of a beauty supply manufactur­er.

However, the city made arrangemen­ts to either donate or sell the site in 2016, according to city officials, and has been keeping Forgotten Child Fund officials updated since at least 2013.

“The Forgotten Child Fund and the Chattanoog­a Furniture Bank have done incredible work to help our residents each year, and we are grateful for their years of service to Chattanoog­ans,” Donna Williams, department of economic and community developmen­t administra­tor, said in a statement. “The Mayor’s Office and the Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t have been working with them to find a solution and ways they could receive city funding.

“We are equally excited to continue moving forward with a plan for this site that will provide stable, safe, long- term housing for people in our city who need it the most, and we are grateful to the Forgotten Child Fund for their understand­ing and cooperatio­n in this critical project.”

Since December of last year, the city has been in conversati­ons with two nonprofits — the AIM

Center and the Vecino Group — to donate the property to be transforme­d into 60 affordable housing units, with supportive units for those with mental illnesses.

It would be at no cost to the city, and the city would rid itself of the maintenanc­e cost, though the new owners would have to enter into a brownfield agreement with the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on to improve upon the site’s environmen­tal issues.

The proposed new developmen­t has already been a point of contention among the surroundin­g neighborho­ods and the city.

Earlier this year, a couple dozen community members gathered to voice their concerns about the impact the developmen­t would have on their property values and what kind of people it would bring to the neighborho­od.

And at a February meeting of the City Council, Simmons expressed his own concerns over what he said was a lack of conversati­on about where the Forgotten Child Fund could move or whether the city could even provide a new location.

Officials say the city has worked with the fund to help it find space that would accommodat­e its needs, although the city does not have any additional warehouse space available.

As of now, Ingle said, the group is not worried about the city’s decisions.

“We’re not wanting to be controvers­ial,” he said. “We just want to make sure no child is forgotten Christmas morning.”

Since 1965, the Forgotten Child Fund has been providing Christmas toys to children whose families can’t afford them. And every Christmas Eve, the fund selects a group of families to visit with its “Santa Train,” a procession of police cars, firetrucks and ambulances, all with emergency lights and sirens on.

Doze n s of first responders and their families — even Santa Claus himself — join the train each year and carry boxes and bags full of toys as excited children watch from their homes, curious about the commotion.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Vehicles line up for the Santa Train at Chattanoog­a State Community College in 2019. The Forgotten Child Fund, which gathered the toys and winter clothes for the Santa Train, was able to help 13,961 children that year.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Vehicles line up for the Santa Train at Chattanoog­a State Community College in 2019. The Forgotten Child Fund, which gathered the toys and winter clothes for the Santa Train, was able to help 13,961 children that year.

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