Hartford Courant

AS TEMPS DROP, A CALL FOR HELP

Warming center asks churches to keep people out of the cold

- By Jesse Leavenwort­h

“It’s heartbreak­ing to have to put people out on the street for the day when the weather is so cold, and all the more when it’s snowing!”

— Leaders of the Manchester Overnight Winter Warming Center

Leaders of the overnight warming center in Manchester are asking local churches to shelter people who are homeless during the day. “It’s heartbreak­ing to have to put people out on the street for the day when the weather is so cold,” a message sent to churches on Friday says, “and all the more when it’s snowing!” Theregiona­l center, which opened late last month, is to operate seven days a week through March 31. At least temporaril­y, the facility fills a gap left when the MACC Charities homeless shelter closed in 2015.

Housedat the CommunityY, 78 North MainSt., the warming center is open from 6 p.m. to 10 a.m. and has been hosting up to eight guests each night, center Director Bryan Flint, whoalso is deputy director at Cornerston­e of Vernon, said Monday.

Cornerston­e, which operates homeless shelters and other services in Vernon, manages the warming center on behalf of the faith-based Greater Manchester Peace and Justice Committee. Townrecrea­tional programs that usually runin the building have been on hold during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Manchester Human Services Director Joel Cox said the center “has been a pretty well run operation so far” and town officials are gaining moreinsigh­t into the local un-sheltered population.

“I think the partnershi­p with Cornerston­e has been beneficial to the town,” Cox said.

Town officials allowed people to stay at the center in the daytime during a recent storm, Flint said, but recently he has been picking guests up in the morning and taking them to Vernon so they can shower and eat and have a place to stay during the daytime hours.

Center guests have been mainly homeless Manchester people, Flint said. Warming center leaders are asking local churches to accommodat­e up to eight people from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., even for one day a week through the end of March.

Flint and Susan Stoppelman of the Peace and Justice Committee said Monday that they have not received any replies to the call for help sent Friday, but some church representa­tives had to be notified by regular mail, so responses may not come until later in the week.

The warming center is not allowed to have beds, but Flint said guests have been provided with portable reclining chairs. Without the center, they would be outside, in tents or “in their cars at night with lots of blankets, if they’re lucky enough to have a car,” Flint said.

Shelter staff are advising guests about housing and job resources, he said, and have helped some people submit applicatio­ns to Dunkin’ Donuts and McDonald’s restaurant­s.

“Most people, they just need a chance,” Flint said.

 ?? MARKMIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Bryan Flint, deputy director of Cornerston­e, sorts sleeping bags inside the Manchester Overnight Winter Warming Center at The Community Y. The center operates from 6 p.m. to 9 a.m. seven days a week.
MARKMIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT Bryan Flint, deputy director of Cornerston­e, sorts sleeping bags inside the Manchester Overnight Winter Warming Center at The Community Y. The center operates from 6 p.m. to 9 a.m. seven days a week.
 ?? MARKMIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT ?? The Manchester Overnight Winter Warming Center is located at The Community Y, 78 North Main St., and can shelter about a dozen people per night.
MARKMIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT The Manchester Overnight Winter Warming Center is located at The Community Y, 78 North Main St., and can shelter about a dozen people per night.

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