By Ryan Michaels
The Birmingham Times
A ribbon cutting for a new homeless shelter for youth that will serve as a “safe haven” and offer services was held Thursday in Smithfield. The Way Station, which received $1.3 million from the city, is a project spearheaded by AIDS Alabama and will give young people the protection they need “at the most critical and vulnerable moments of time is critical to all of us,” said Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin.
“Our young people are our city’s most precious resource…but there has to be more than words behind that statement. … There has to be action, and this is proof of actual action,” he said.
The Way Station will house two programs for residents, the regular shelter and transitional housing. Youth may use the shelter on a nightly basis but can stay in the transitional housing for up to two years.
Beyond just providing a place to stay, the facility also includes a staffed on-site kitchen, laundry area, medical area, a courtyard and numerous other meeting spaces.
Kathie Hiers, CEO of AIDS Alabama, said her organization knows that stopping human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes AIDS, is a bigger task than it first seems.
“Our board of directors, a long time ago, had the foresight to realize that we can’t end HIV as an epidemic if we only focus on HIV because if a person is homeless, there’s a whole lot better chance they’re going to end up with HIV than someone who’s not homeless,” Hiers said.
“And we all know that young people, particularly, have a lot of challenges, especially when they’re on the street, whether it’s trafficking or drug use or whatever,” she added.
Housing is health care, Hiers said, because “it’s sure hard to take care of yourself if you don’t have a safe, decent, affordable place to call home.”
Caroline Bundy, director of development for AIDS Alabama, said she first came up with the idea back in November 2017.
“I don’t think any one of us at that time had a feeling it was gonna lead us to this. I can safely say that I didn’t think so,” Bundy said.
To an audience of city and nonprofit leaders, social workers, donors and others, Bundy said there was one thing bringing together everybody in attendance at the ribbon cutting.
“The one strain that unites us all is that we care about people that need a hand up, that are struggling and especially…we care about the young people in our community that are struggling, and the Way Station, if I can brag a little bit, is going to be an amazing program,” Bundy said.
In transitional housing, the youth residents may stay for a period of up to two years and work with social workers to find jobs, complete education and find affordable housing. Residents in the transitional housing program will be referred by One Roof, the homeless continuum of care agency for Jefferson County.
For the temporary shelter program, the Way Station has 10 semi-private rooms each for men and women residents. Each room has a window, a bed and storage.
- The transitional housing is also separated into male and female wings, both composed of four double-occupancy bedrooms and two single-occupancy bedrooms, all of which have wheelchair-accessible bathrooms. Each of the transitional housing rooms also contain a desk per person.
For more information on the Way Station, visit https://www.aidsalabama.org/thewaystation.
Operation of the Way Station, which is still seeking donations, is expected to begin this fall.