Trouble in the Garden Historic Chicago homeless shelter is under siege by City Hall Bob Smietana
August 1, 2003
The world-famous Pacific Garden Mission has been struggling for 126 years to help Chicago's homeless with hot meals and give them a roof over their heads. For the last 4 years, it has also been battling the city. The mission provides meals and shelter for up to 1,000 people a day at its historic brick building at 646 South State Street—known as the Old Lighthouse—with its famous neon-border cross reading Jesus Saves. Pacific Garden tapes its radio drama, Unshackled, there every Saturday. The Chicago Board of Education has been attempting to buy the building since 1999. The city says it wants to make room for a planned expansion of the adjacent Jones College Prep High School. "We need more space to become a fully functioning high school," said Cynthia Barron, founding principal of Jones High and an officer for Chicago Public Schools. Advocates for the poor think more is going on. John Donahue, executive director of the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, said gentrification is a prime reason for the push. "The city is responding to the new people in the neighborhood who want the shelter moved and are using the school as an excuse," he said. In the last decade, Donahue said, four large homeless shelters in Chicago—the Olive Branch, Sousa's Place, Cooper's Place, and the Christian Industrial League—have been pushed to move or make plans to move. Pacific Garden Mission has been at this site since 1923, but it is open to moving, said David McCarrell, the mission's president. "We have agreed to move to four different locations," he said. "Three times the city has given initial approval and then withdrawn that approval. The last place we looked at…was priced right out of the market." He told Christianity Today that relocating would cost ...
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