Detroit Free Press

Former YMCA lists for nearly $1M after shelter closure

‘When there’s no funds, you can’t operate’

- JC Reindl

A social services organizati­on on Detroit’s east side has closed its housing shelter after 26 years and is attempting to sell the nowempty building: a giant YMCA from the 1930s.

The nonprofit Operation Get Down ran a temporary shelter for homeless men and men who have reentered society after being incarcerat­ed out of the former Northeaste­rn branch YMCA at 10100 Harper Ave.

The shelter opened in 1997 and housed 66 men just before it closed Nov. 2 for financial reasons, according to Deborah Powell-Conner, the organizati­on’s interim CEO. The closure was due to “lack of funding from the city of Detroit,” she said Wednesday.

“We didn’t want to close but we didn’t have any choice,” Powell-Conner said. “When there’s no funds, you can’t operate.”

The shelter residents were then directed to other housing.

“We transferre­d them over to Detroit Rescue Mission, and the city took it over from there,” Powell-Conner said.

Operation Get Down recently listed the five-story building for sale with a $999,000 asking price. An open house Wednesday fielded interest from a few potential buyers, Powell-Conner said.

The former Y features dormitory-style rooms, a stone-paved inner courtyard and a vintage gymnasium with overhead running track. There once was an indoor swimming pool, but it was filled in years ago. According to Free Press archives, the YMCA of Metro Detroit sold the 140,000-square-foot building to Operation Get Down for $1.

Detroit officials on Wednesday emphasized that the city did not pull any significan­t funding for Operation Get Down that would have resulted in the shelter closing. In fact, the city intended to continue funding the shelter into 2024, officials said.

While the city did withhold some cost reimbursem­ent funds in August and September for lack of documentat­ion by the organizati­on, the money would have been released had cost informatio­n been forthcomin­g, officials said.

“We are disappoint­ed in Operation Get Down’s decision to cease operations, and thank them for their decades of service to the residents of the city of Detroit,” Julie Schneider, director of Detroit’s Housing & Revitaliza­tion Department, said in a statement. “We are glad we were able to assist in relocating and providing resources to the residents who were displaced as a result of the organizati­on’s closure.”

Operation Get Down may have also been feeling pressure from a recent loss of state funds.

The Michigan Department of Correction­s said it stopped making referrals this summer to the organizati­on after an independen­t audit found the shelter wasn’t fully compliant with the Federal Prison Rape Eliminatio­n Act. It was the shelter’s first such audit.

Department spokesman Kyle Kaminski said Wednesday the audit wasn’t prompted by any reports of rape at the shelter.

A copy of the audit report, reviewed by the Free Press, describes the audit as routine and says the shelter was not in compliance with 30 federal standards during auditors’ August

2022 visit. Those standards included proper employee training, screening for risk of victimizat­ion and having protocols in place to investigat­e any allegation­s.

Operation Get Down was started in the 1970s and continues to exist, although without any active programs since the shelter closed last month. The organizati­on hopes to relocate to a smaller office and someday restart programs, Powell-Conner said.

Bob Schwartz, CEO of the Here to Help Foundation, said Wednesday his group provided services, including job placement help, to some of the formerly incarcerat­ed men who stayed at Operation Get Down for three- to sixmonth stints following their release.

“It’s been a staple in the community for a long time,” he said. “These individual­s were those who were more displaced than others, in the sense that they had no family or friends to parole to.”

Some men received only a few days’ notice to pack up and leave before the shelter closed, Schwartz said. Some went to the Team Wellness Center on Jefferson Avenue, he said, while others entered independen­t housing programs.

“Everybody ultimately got to where they could move,” Schwartz said. “But the unfortunat­e thing is, many of the people who had jobs had close-by jobs. And then all of the sudden you’re moving to the completely opposite side of town — and you just can’t get to your job on time. So it was a problem for a stretch.”

The Harper Avenue Y building joins two other old brick Detroit YMCA branches that are now empty and available for purchase. The others — the Western branch YMCA at 1601 Clark St. in southwest Detroit and the Fisher branch YMCA at 2051 W. Grand Blvd. — were as of September both owned by prominent Detroit landlord Dennis Kefallinos.

 ?? ERIC SEALS/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Operation Get Down closed its temporary shelter in the old YMCA building on Harper Avenue and listed the property for $999,000. They had an open house at the building in Detroit on Wednesday.
ERIC SEALS/DETROIT FREE PRESS Operation Get Down closed its temporary shelter in the old YMCA building on Harper Avenue and listed the property for $999,000. They had an open house at the building in Detroit on Wednesday.

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