{"id":74019,"date":"2021-08-11T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-08-12T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/glory-hall-operating-at-near-normal-capacity\/"},"modified":"2021-08-13T11:50:04","modified_gmt":"2021-08-13T19:50:04","slug":"glory-hall-operating-at-near-normal-capacity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/glory-hall-operating-at-near-normal-capacity\/","title":{"rendered":"Glory Hall operating at near normal capacity"},"content":{"rendered":"
An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified the Glory Hall as running the shelter in the Juneau Arts and Culture Center, as opposed to St. Vincent de Paul Juneau.<\/ins><\/em><\/p>\n The new Glory Hall building is a far cry from its predecessor. The Mendenhall Valley llocation has ample space on all sides, a marked difference from its Franklin Street location<\/p>\n Despite concerns that Glory Hall patrons would not follow the soup kitchen and shelter to its new location, the spacious, purpose-built building quickly attracted a full-capacity crowd.<\/p>\n “I was really surprised by how quickly it filled up, given people’s concerns about getting out here,” said executive director Mariya Lovishchuk in an interview. “That fear did not materialize at all.”<\/p>\n All of the shelter’s 43 private, individual rooms are full up, Lovishchuk said, and some of the overflow bunk beds are also occupied. But said agencies that provide services to Juneau’s unshelter population are not especially worried about winter, Lovishchuk said. St. Vincent de Paul Juneau is no longer occupying a portion of the Juneau Arts and Culture Center, she said. <\/p>\n “We do think we’ll be totally full during the winter, but we think between here and the warming shelter we’ll have it covered. I’m very optimistic about that,” Lovishchuk said. “We’ll use the conference rooms. If we have to, we’ll use this office.”<\/p>\n Better outcomes<\/p>\n The expanded capacity of the new structure is already paying off, Lovishchuk said, with multiple simple but far-reaching quality-of-life improvements.<\/p>\n “I don’t have words appropriate to describe how great it’s been. People can now meet with providers and have private conversations,” Lovishchuk said. “Nothing is getting stolen. We have cameras that work, so now, if there is an issue, we can find out what happened.”<\/p>\n A number of guests at the shelter have already been able to connect with long-term housing solutions, Lovishchuk said.<\/p>\n “We are really excited about our new building because we can move people to better places. Their stay in the emergency shelter should be as short as possible,” Lovishchuk said. “We want to funnel people through here into more permanent housing as rapidly as possible.”<\/p>\n The transition wasn’t entirely without hiccups, Lovishchuk said, with the national logistics slowdowns affecting the opening of the new building’s kitchen, requiring the shelter to use the old location’s kitchen and transport the food, a colossally inefficient process. There were also some speed bumps of a more banal nature, including the delayed arrival of the mattresses for the beds — and some reassembling required.<\/p>\n “We did put together three beds upside down! But we quickly put them together right side up,” Lovishchuk said. “We actually ended up borrowing a bunch of cots from the hospital, and we borrowed a bunch of mattresses from JYS (Juneau Youth Services. Ten days later, our mattresses finally showed up.”<\/p>\n Being neighborly<\/p>\n