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File #: 0668-2024    Version: 1
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 2/27/2024 In control: Housing, Homelessness, & Building Committee
On agenda: 3/18/2024 Final action: 3/21/2024
Title: To authorize the Director of Development to enter into a Beneficiary Grant Agreement with Community Shelter Board in an amount up to $9,467,191.00 of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds to provide operating support for CBS’s Emergency Shelter Program and to pay for expenses starting January 1, 2024; and to authorize the expenditure of up to $9,467,191.00 of ARPA funds; and to declare an emergency. ($9,467,191.00)
Attachments: 1. 2024-03-11 Admin CSB Surge 2024 ARPA.pdf
Explanation

BACKGROUND: This legislation authorizes the Director of Development to enter into a Beneficiary Grant Agreement with Community Shelter Board (CSB), a non-profit corporation, in an amount up to $9,467,191.00 of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds to provide operating support for CSB’s Emergency Shelter Program and to pay for expenses starting January 1, 2024.

Ordinance 1201-2021 authorized the City of Columbus to accept and appropriate approximately $187,030,138.00 of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds as signed into law by the President of the United States on March 11, 2021.

CSB provides emergency shelters for men, women, and children. Once in shelter, in addition to providing a secure, clean place to stay, emergency shelter programs provide meals, rehousing services, physical and behavioral healthcare, material assistance, referrals, and employment services. Shelters operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Children staying at the family shelters are supervised in an age-appropriate environment where they participate in developmental activities, receive homework help, childcare, and health services. The shelters that will receive these funds include Lutheran Social Services-Faith Mission, Maryhaven Engagement Center, Southeast Inc.-Friends of the Homeless, YWCA Family Center, and the YMCA Van Buren Center.

CSB and partners leverage significant additional funding from multiple sources to operate emergency homeless shelters. Surge funding from the City of Columbus in 2021, 2022, and 2023 helped the shelter partners to fill budget gaps and attract/retain high quality staff. This funding will assist with funding shelter operations in 2024, including, but not limited to: raising the minimum wage to $21/hour to intake staff, front line engagement staff, and case management staff in emergency shelters

CSB and the shelter system has been negatively impacted by COVID-19 by reduced funding from other sources, higher than pre-COVID lev...

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