Washington County preparing to build homeless shelter on government center campus in Stillwater
Washington County officials, from left, Jennifer Castillo, Karly Schoeman, Sarah Tripple and Kevin Corbid tour the site where the county’s new million emergency homeless shelter is to be built next year in Stillwater. (Mary Divine / Pioneer Press)
Jennifer Castillo, Washington County’s director of community services, stands near an old garage on the campus of the Washington County Government Center in Stillwater, where next year a $12 million emergency homeless shelter will be built.
Washington County officials have been working for more than a decade to address the lack of adequate emergency housing in the county.
“These are people who live in our communities, and they are asking for help,” Castillo said during a recent tour of the site. “They are asking for services. They are asking for support. We are trying to help them get to a good, stable point in their lives.”
The 30,000-square-foot shelter, scheduled to open next fall, will provide short-term housing to individuals over age 18. The average stay is expected to be around 90 days.
The two-story building will have 30 private rooms — four on the first floor and 26 on the second floor — with 24/7 staffing to provide people experiencing homelessness a place to stay while county officials help them find permanent housing and employment. They’ll also have access to social-service support, well-being support, legal help and help in gathering important documents, Castillo said.
The programming that will be offered to residents is key, said Karly Schoeman, deputy executive director of the Washington County Community Development Agency.
“This isn’t people coming in who can only stay for the evening and then they have to leave during the day,” she said. “There’s programming all day long. This is a 24/7 building, and we have all of the supports available through the county for residents of this building, so if they need help with whatever barriers they’re facing to permanent housing, they have to be addressing that in order to stay. They have to be working with the program.”
The project — the first of its kind in the county — will greatly reduce the need for contracting with local hotels to provide emergency shelter, Castillo said. Some contracts will remain in place to support families and people affected by critical events.
“We have been operating an interim shelter for four years with roughly the same capacity that we will have here, and it hasn’t been an issue,” Castillo said. “All we are doing is transferring to a better location where we can have more supports that are readily available to people. It really is a positive step.”
Neighborhood concerns
But some have expressed concerns about the location of the shelter. Oak Park Heights Mayor Mary McComber said she has received a number of calls and complaints from nearby residents and business owners.
“It’s right next to a single-family residential area,” McComber said. “It should be somewhere else in Washington County.”
McComber said she is concerned that city officials in Oak Park Heights, which borders the site to the east, weren’t notified of the county’s plan. “This was pushed all the way through before we knew about it,” she said. “This just went right through Stillwater and the county. We weren’t part of that discussion.”
Chris Addington, a registered nurse who lives in Baytown Township, said she also was concerned by the lack of publicity about the proposed shelter. She feels county officials failed to properly inform people in the area.
“No one knows anything about this,” Addington said. “This project should be on hold until the required proper informed consent is made, and there is full disclosure. The people should have a chance to speak. Nothing should move forward without the taxpayers’ input. The taxpayers will be responsible.”
Addington said she supports an emergency homeless shelter in the county, but says the Stillwater site is not the ideal location.
“There is no transportation, and there are no facilities,” she said. “It’s near a school, a church, a pharmacy, a hospital and many businesses. The only thing that is open 24 hours is the jail.”
Plans call for the shelter to be built on 1.5 acres on the southeast corner of the 29-acre Washington County Government Center campus, between the Washington County Law Enforcement Center and Minnesota Highway 36. The county purchased the now-vacant property, which originally included a house and garage, in 2019.
The location, marked “EHS Bldg.,” where Washington County officials will next year build a new $12 million emergency homeless shelter in Stillwater. The site is in the southeast corner of the grounds of the Washington County Government Center in Stillwater. (Courtesy of Washington County)
County officials selected the site after an “extensive search throughout the county because it was an available lot on county-owned property close to resources within the Washington County Government Center,” Castillo said. “It was within our budget.”
The Washington County Community Development Agency will be the developer of the project, which will be owned by Washington County. Ten bids from general contractors were received by the 2 p.m. Tuesday deadline, and all were “well within the cost estimate for the development,” Schoeman said. On Tuesday, the county board will consider action on final funding based on bid results, and the CDA will consider the bids and possibly award a construction contract for the project on Oct. 22.
How it will work
Washington County Commissioner Gary Kriesel, who represents Stillwater, said helping the homeless is “a shared responsibility of the county, state and community.”
Building the new shelter, officially called the Emergency Housing Services Building, “demonstrates the county’s commitment to supporting its most vulnerable residents,” he said. “The board’s support for this effort reflects our desire to ensure every person in the county has the opportunity to thrive.”
An architect’s rendering of Washington County’s new Emergency Housing Services building, a 30,000-square-foot emergency homeless shelter that will be built on 1.5 acres on the southeast corner of Washington County’s main campus in Stillwater. The $12 million project is expected to open in the fall of 2025. (Courtesy of LHB Corp.)
The shelter will offer 23 single rooms and seven double rooms. Residents can stay with partners, regardless of gender, and each room will have its own bathroom. “It’s very similar to a modest hotel room,” Castillo said. “They will have space to keep their belongings safe.”
Residents also will be allowed to keep their pets on site, Castillo said. “Getting to have their pets, their companions, within reason, is a big part of this,” she said.
Among the other amenities: offices for workforce services, mental-health supports and financial assistance; on-site parking; a commercial kitchen with meals and snacks provided; an on-site computer lab; a large gathering space; and a meditation/quiet room.
The shelter’s front door will face an employee parking lot, and there will be a fenced rear yard and patio. A stormwater retention pond and a wooded area will serve as a buffer for privacy.
No walk-ups will be allowed, Castillo said. Residents will be referred to the shelter by the Washington County Homeless Outreach Services Team and must meet eligibility criteria, including being over 18, passing a criminal background check, no active substance use and agreeing to actively participate in a housing plan. Anyone accepted to the program must be physically present and unsheltered in Washington County for at least a night before their stay commences, she said.
The shelter will not be “first-come, first-served,” Schoeman added.
“It’s really the county outreach service workers that are identifying homeless people in Washington County who want to work with the program to address their barriers, and then they’re invited to come to this building, so it’s really a mutual agreement to be able to stay,” she said.
The project has been funded through a combination of federal and state grants and the Local Affordable Housing Aid program.
Some now going to neighboring counties
Because Washington County does not have any permanent emergency housing capacity for adults without children, more than 70 county residents had to seek shelter in neighboring counties in 2023. Dakota County, in contrast, has 45 rooms and Anoka County has 66 rooms.
Washington County has the highest gross median monthly rent — $1,668 — in the seven-county metro area, according to the Census Bureau’s 2023 American Community Survey. The others: Anoka, $1,294; Carver, $1,583; Dakota, $1,585; Hennepin, $1,445; Ramsey, $1,367; and Scott, $1,434.
County officials currently have a contract with the Asteria Inn & Suites in Stillwater, which is just a half-mile west of the site, to secure rooms to provide emergency housing. In the past, the county has contracted with Coratel Inn & Suites in Stillwater, Woodspring Suites in Woodbury and Stillwater Inn and Suites in Stillwater.
Using hotel rooms was a response to COVID, when private rooms were needed to mitigate the virus, Castillo said, but placing people in hotel rooms temporarily “was not a sustainable long-term solution.”
Twenty-four people are now enrolled in the county’s interim emergency housing program, said Sarah Tripple, division manager of Washington County Community Services. Most are older than 55: Thirty-three percent are 65 or older and 21 percent are between 55 and 64, she said.
“Over the several years we’ve done this program, we’ve seen that trend increase with people in their 70s coming into shelter due to some medical issue or loss of a partner or something like that,” she said.
The racial breakdown of people served is consistent with the demographics of the county, she said.
Homelessness and hunger
People who live or own businesses within a 1/4-mile of county property were notified of the shelter plans, and the notification area was extended to complete neighborhoods if only part of a neighborhood was originally included, Tripple said. The county held three open houses last spring to talk about the plan.
The site is located in Stillwater’s public-administrative-offices district, which allows residential uses with a conditional-use permit. The Stillwater City Council signed off on the plans for the project in June after holding a public hearing in May.
Transportation is a challenge at the site, but “transportation is a challenge throughout the entire county,” Castillo said. “We have plans in place for that.”
Based on the demographics of people being served at The Asteria Inn & Suites, county officials expect that many of the residents of the new shelter will have access to a car, but the county is budgeting for transportation services, including car repair, ride-hailing services or tickets for Metro Transit, TransitLink or MetroMobility, Castillo said. Additionally, the free Community Thread Connector Loop runs every Monday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. between Stillwater and Oak Park Heights.
Members of Stillwater’s First Presbyterian Church, which is located near the Government Center, “enthusiastically support the project,” said Rev. Cader Howard, the church’s pastor.
The Rev. Cader Howard, pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Stillwater. (Courtesy of Cader Howard)
“Our church is very engaged in the issues of homelessness and hunger,” he said. “We have encountered many, many people who are coming to our church for help who don’t have housing, so we think it’s badly needed in the community.”
The church has hosted four events — called PIT Stops — with the help of other area churches, nonprofit organizations and Washington County to serve people in need. People can stop in to eat a warm meal, get a haircut and have access to shower and laundry facilities. They also receive personal care items, food, gas cards, clothing, baby items and school supplies, Howard said.
The name “PIT” comes from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s “Point-in-Time” count in January, an annual count of those experiencing homelessness on a single night across the United States.
The Government Center campus is the “perfect spot” for the shelter, Howard said.
“There are already many people being housed at the hotels in town, and I think they’re more vulnerable there, and people have been preying on them,” he said. “What I love about this location is that it’s right beside the county offices, so many of the agencies that they need to connect with are, I mean, literally across the parking lot. And there’s the built-in security of the sheriff’s department.”
James Cheeks, 45, of Woodbury, had been living in his Kia Rio for several months in 2022 when he received county assistance to stay in the Stillwater Inn & Suites.
“It’s really hard to maintain full-time employment if you don’t have a shelter at all,” he said. “You have no place to take a shower, and you have no way to cook or eat any food before going to work.”
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Had the Emergency Housing Services Building existed back when Cheeks needed help, he said his situation would have been far less stressful. “It’s not just having room and board; it’s the other services that are there to help me get back on my feet,” he said. “No one wants to be in a homeless shelter forever. That’s a really big plus: helping people get back on their feet and helping people find stability and move on.”
The county also is working on several major projects to provide more than 200 new units of affordable housing in the next year or so.
“We understand that the shelter isn’t the solution,” Castillo said. “But, in the meantime, until we can increase the affordable-housing supply, we have to do something to support the people who can’t find housing.”