Las Vegas Review-Journal

Shade Tree reviving transition­al housing

Women’s shelter will use 16-apartment complex

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

The Shade Tree women’s shelter will restart a segment of its transition­al housing program at a 16-apartment complex in Las Vegas.

Shelter leaders announced plans in August to close the 160-bed transition­al housing program due to a funding shortfall, and launched a $2.3 million fundraisin­g effort — the amount Executive Director Stacey Lockhart said was needed to reopen and operate the shelter’s transition­al housing.

“We’re not quite where we need to be,” she said Friday. “We still need to raise more money.”

The Shade Tree is about halfway to its fundraisin­g goal, Lockhart said.

A new partnershi­p with Las Vegas Family Housing Villages, an affordable housing nonprofit recently created by Veterans Village founder Arnold Stalk, will allow some women to move from The Shade Tree 90-day emergency shelter into furnished apartments with stocked kitchens.

However, the 16 apartments still need work, and Lockhart said she didn’t have an estimate for when women would be able to move in.

Women will be able to live in the apartments for up to a year, with access to The Shade Tree case managers, financial assistance and other services, while they work to find permanent housing, Lockhart said.

The Shade Tree has continued to operate its emergency shelter, which houses women and their children for up to 90 days, despite the transition­al housing program’s closure.

Stalk called developing more affordable and transition­al housing “the only solution to the homeless problem in Southern Nevada.”

Stalk, Lockhart and Las Vegas city officials gathered for the Friday announceme­nt at the Veterans Village #2 campus. The new Shade Tree apartments sit next to the building on the Veterans Village campus that houses female veterans.

Las Vegas ranks among the 10

U.S. cities with the largest homeless population­s, according to an annual report by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

The city of Las Vegas is slated to expand one of its programs for the homeless next month, when the homeless services courtyard at Foremaster Lane and Las Vegas Boulevard is slated to move to a 24/7 operation. The courtyard is modeled after the Haven for Hope in San Antonio.

 ?? Andrea Cornejo ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @dreacornej­o Arnold Stalk, founder of Veterans Village, announces a partnershi­p with The Shade Tree women’s shelter Friday to help restart its transition­al housing program.
Andrea Cornejo Las Vegas Review-journal @dreacornej­o Arnold Stalk, founder of Veterans Village, announces a partnershi­p with The Shade Tree women’s shelter Friday to help restart its transition­al housing program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States