Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LGBT shelter drops permit applicatio­n, cites threat

- EMMA PETTIT

A Little Rock nonprofit hoping to buy a home to harbor young lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people withdrew its permit applicatio­n after a potential neighbor threatened to publicize the address, according to the group’s leader.

Lucie’s Place already runs a four- bed residence for young LGBT adults who don’t have homes, said Penelope Poppers, the executive director. Young people who need a place to live can stay in the home for up to a year and use the time to find a job, continue their education or save money.

But central Arkansas’ need is far greater than four beds, Poppers said, because gay and transgende­r young adults are more likely to end up without homes. LGBT make up between 20 to 40 percent of the homeless youth population in the United States, whereas they comprise 5 to 10 percent of the general youth population, according to the Center for American Progress.

The nonprofit had applied for a conditiona­l use permit to operate a seven- bed home in the Leawood neighborho­od of Little Rock, southwest of Cammack Village, Poppers said. The permit allows for the group to use a residentia­l home that isn’t specifical­ly zoned for that purpose.

After finding the house, the group paid the permit applicatio­n fee, surveyed the land and had the home inspected, which cost about $1,000 in total.

But in August, Poppers received an email from someone who said she did not want to live “anywhere near a home like this.” The email had no contact informatio­n, but Poppers said she believes it’s from a woman who lives a few minutes away from the home. The email was first reported by the Arkansas Times.

“Since I have personal experience running a home like this, I am aware of the dangers involved, from a resident disclosing the location of the home, to a person tracking them down, to sneaking drugs in, to having a criminal background that’s undisclose­d,” the email said.

The emailer wrote of intentions to make it a “personal mission to get all of our neighbors involved in disclosing the location of this home to anyone that we can and fighting the forward motion of this plan.”

“I cannot even believe that you would be considerin­g opening a home of this nature in a residentia­l neighborho­od, that has many many children all around it,” the email said. It concluded by calling the home a “wonderful idea, just not in this neighborho­od!”

After a couple days of considerat­ion, Poppers and her staff decided to withdraw the permit applicatio­n and look somewhere else. It was the promise to disclose the home’s address that was particular­ly threatenin­g, she said.

Lucie’s Place does not publicly disclose the location of its current home or future homes to ensure residents feel safe and won’t become targets of vandalism or violence, Poppers said.

“She made it very clear she was going to take that away from us,” she said.

Poppers said she was also bothered by the emailer’s insistence that the goal of Lucie’s Place was acceptable in theory, just not in practice.

“It’s this idea that if you sort of smile when you say these horrible things that it makes it better,”

The emailer wrote of intentions to make it a “personal mission to get all of our neighbors involved in disclosing the location of this home to anyone that we can and fighting the forward motion of this plan.”

Poppers said.

After pulling the permit request, the organizati­on found a new, eight- bed home closer to downtown, Poppers said. The group will likely submit a permit applicatio­n next week and start the process again, she said.

After the applicatio­n is submitted, the group will send mailers to all neighbors within 200 feet of the new property informing them of its intent, Poppers said. It will host a public hearing. Poppers will answer questions from concerned residents. Then, if the city board approves the permit, the group will wait an additional 30 days to ensure no other opposition surfaces, she said.

Poppers said she’s optimistic. The new home is more centrally located and on a bus route, which is ideal for the people the group services.

In addition to the residences, Lucie’s Place also staffs a walk- in center for those who need resume and job applicatio­n assistance, cellphone minutes and bus passes, among other things.

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