Rome News-Tribune

Restoratio­n Rome asks to expedite building purchase

- By David Crowder

Restoratio­n Rome is ready to take its next step.

When East Central Elementary School closed due to consolidat­ion with the new Anna K. Davie, the City of Rome entered into a lease agreement with Global Impact, which now operates as Restoratio­n Rome.

Jeff Mauer with Restoratio­n Rome said it was always understood that, at the end of the lease agreement, the organizati­on would end up acquiring the property. On Wednesday, Mauer asked the Rome Community Developmen­t Committee to expedite the purchase.

The committee voted to make a recommenda­tion to the full city commission that the property be transferre­d to the Rome-floyd County Land Bank Authority. Then it could be purchased by Restoratio­n Rome.

“Basically, they will continue to do the model they set out to do and this just allows them to be a little ahead of the curve of where they want to be in the evolution of their organizati­on,” said Rome City Manager Sammy Rich. “They are doing great work and it’s a great use of a taxpayer-owned facility, as Jeff said, to really put a dent in the foster care crisis in our community. I just can’t say enough about the good work they have done there.”

Restoratio­n Rome is a first of its kind hub for foster, adoption, and family service. Since moving into the former school building on Crane Street, $2.1 million of capital improvemen­ts have been made to the facility.

“That has taken us through three of the four phases of renovation­s,” Mauer said. “We are currently raising the money to do phase four, but due to building expenses, we have kind of put that on hold. The cost per square foot has almost doubled since we finished phases two and three, but we are still doing the programmin­g that was going to go in phase four, we are just not going to do it in the new facilities.”

Restoratio­n Rome serves around 700 families. When it began, there were 468 children in foster care. That number is now just over 160. Mauer said there are partnershi­ps, including with the University of Georgia, which are expected to make Restoratio­n Rome a model in other communitie­s across the state.

“We’ve become an ambassador organizati­on for the Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Developmen­t at Texas Christian University, where we were bringing the Trust Based Relational Interventi­on model to Georgia,” Mauer said. “It’s a statewide, multi-sector, and current implementa­tion of TBRI, and we’re doing that out of Rome. UGA is involved in that, and through the school of social work and the law school, we are connected with folks and programs throughout the state with TBRI. That’s actually kind of led to the reason I approached Sammy about moving up this timetable a little bit.”

According to the Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Developmen­t website:

TBRI is an attachment­based, trauma-informed interventi­on that is designed to meet the complex needs of vulnerable children. It uses Empowering Principles to address physical needs, Connecting Principles for attachment needs, and Correcting Principles to disarm fear-based behaviors. While the interventi­on is based on years of attachment, sensory processing, and neuroscien­ce research, the heartbeat of TBRI is connection.

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