The line for a free hot meal, free groceries and free clothing began forming in an alley across from St. Paul's new Allianz Field well before noon Monday. Started by Bethlehem Lutheran Church more than a decade ago to help clothe and feed people living in poverty, Open Hands Midway serves hundreds each week.
While many who serve the area's neediest residents express hope that the shiny new stadium and subsequent development will spur improvement throughout the area, some worry that increased traffic, booming property values and a wave of hipster migration could squeeze out Midway's most vulnerable population.
"Everyone in the Midway wants to see things get better. But we don't want to throw the baby out with the bathwater," said Troy Wilson, pastor of community outreach at Central Baptist Church, which, like Bethlehem Lutheran, is within sight of the new stadium. Wilson has for several years ministered to people coming out of prison and recovering from addiction.
"How can we balance the improvement we are going to see here with still being available and welcoming to the most vulnerable?" he asked.
Few expect an answer to that question for at least a couple of years, not until the neighborhood surrounding Allianz Field more fully transforms. But with two new developments with hundreds of market rate apartments rising soon across the alley, Central Baptist Senior Pastor Joel Lawrence said the neighboring churches are talking about what they can do to mitigate the possible loss of affordable housing and protect minority-owned small businesses from getting priced out of the area.
Possibilities include creating a community benefits fund, with potential contributions from Minnesota United and other local businesses, to Central Baptist buying nearby homes to preserve as affordable housing.
"On the whole, there is a sense of excitement about the new possibilities that are here," Lawrence said, "along with concerns about what it's going to mean for some folks."
The $250 million soccer stadium hosts its first United game April 13. Dubbed "the Spaceship" by neighbors, the 20,000-seat structure wrapped in a gray mesh already has created buzz. On Friday, thousands of fans and neighbors came to an open house featuring a fully operational beer hall and team store. A DJ spun tunes over the stadium's public address system.