Home Bay Point Glover: Fate of Bay Point Shelter Concerns the County

Glover: Fate of Bay Point Shelter Concerns the County

by ECT

The clock is ticking for Love-A- Child Ministries, a privately run shelter for women and children in Bay Point.

“If necessary, the county is prepared to assist in making arrangements for housing” for the women and children currently living at Love-A- Child, said Supervisor Federal Glover, “

The shelter’s executive director Jerome Knott has defaulted on $216,000 loaned to Love-A- Child by the Sacramento-based Nehemiah Community Reinvestment Fund. The county is not a party to this financial transaction. In addition, the privately run shelter owes over $100,000 in back taxes and other debts.

At stake are the 70 beds and the people currently living at Love-A- Child, who through no fault of their own, are in danger of losing their shelter.

After reaching an agreement with Knott for an Aug. 10 inspection, Nehemiah and county officials, including Supervisor Federal Glover, attempted to inspect the facility only to meet resistance from Knott and his staff. Knott was emphatic – at one point shouting at Glover — that he would not allow the visit to continue as planned.

Fearing that the situation could get out of hand, Glover asked that deputies be sent to the facility. The officers showed up within minutes, said David Fraser, the supervisor’s chief of staff who was among the visitors. Fraser also pointed out that in order to avoid a confrontation, Nehemiah needed to obtain a court order, which the deputies would then be able to enforce.

The Nehemiah representative agreed to that procedure and the visitors, which included the county’s homeless services director and a Building Code Inspector, left the facility.

Nehemiah plans to conduct an inspection of the facilities in October and start the process of foreclosure. The lender agreed to work with the county so that the people currently living there will not have to seek alternative housing or move their belongings.

Since Love-A- Child has had numerous building code infractions in the past, there is a possibility the current facility might not meet the county’s health and safety standards for a shelter.

“There is a dire need for shelter beds in our county,” said Glover. “We don’t want to see the women and children become homeless because of the poor financial decisions by Love-A- Child’s operators.”

You may also like