{"id":20724,"date":"2017-12-03T15:09:59","date_gmt":"2017-12-03T23:09:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/homeless-come-in-from-the-cold\/"},"modified":"2017-12-03T15:09:59","modified_gmt":"2017-12-03T23:09:59","slug":"homeless-come-in-from-the-cold","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/homeless-come-in-from-the-cold\/","title":{"rendered":"Homeless come in from the cold"},"content":{"rendered":"
With the exception of a yellow handbag, Chellsy Milton brought just the clothes on her back. The outfit included three jackets, on top of which she’d pile seven blankets on a typical night sleeping in doorways downtown, she said.<\/p>\n
Milton and her partner Chris King are homeless. They were the first two to show up on the first night the City and Borough of Juneau opened its warming shelter downtown, which is just a sparsely-appointed room with 15 FEMA cots, each with a thin brown blanket on top. Milton and King claimed two cots in the corner and pushed them together.<\/p>\n
“It means a lot to be here,” Milton said. “I am just trying not to get sick right now breathing in all that cold air.<\/p>\n
“It gets really challenging,” when the temperature drops, King said. “I wear three jackets, always.”<\/p>\n
The shelter will be open from now until April every night the temperature dips below 32 degrees Fahrenheit. It could be opened on nights above freezing as well, but that will be up to the discretion of shelter staff, who will have to make the judgment call when the temperature hovers around freezing.<\/p>\n
Two attendants, Mandy Cole and Scott Ciambor, are posted in a drafty corridor at the entrance doing intake. The facility has strict rules. Each person using its services has to sign a contract requiring them to stay quiet and abstain from drinking or using drugs on the premise. “Everyone is expected to treat each other with respect,” Cole explained.<\/p>\n
People are expected to sleep and do little else. It’s open from 11 p.m.-6:30 a.m. Those who leave can’t come back the same night.<\/p>\n
“What you’re seeing is basically what the service is, a sleeping shelter only. Cots, blanket, we do have some emergency water. There are options to use the bathroom if necessary, but pretty much it is just a bare-bones sleeping shelter,” Ciambor said.<\/p>\n
Ciambor is the Chief Housing Officer for CBJ, a position created in February of 2016<\/a> to help address housing issues. The warming shelter — which CBJ funded in November with a $75,000 commitment — is just a stop-gap measure to keep Juneau’s unsheltered from freezing to death during winter months, he said.<\/p>\n