When the Dorothy Day Center opened in downtown St. Paul in 1981, it was little more than a drop-in place to get a bite to eat and line up services.
Now it's the largest shelter in Ramsey County, so full a couple of years ago that it was forced to turn away some homeless.
It was that "canary-in-a-coal-mine" moment, said Tim Marx, CEO of Catholic Charities of St. Paul and Minneapolis, that led to Thursday's launch of a task force expected to expand and reshape Dorothy Day on its current site or elsewhere.
Mayor Chris Coleman made the announcement at the annual Dorothy Day Community Breakfast for business, faith, government and nonprofit officials.
Co-chairs will be two of the city's most influential leaders: Matt Kramer, president of the St. Paul Area Chamber of Commerce, and Carleen Rhodes, president of the Minnesota Community Foundation.
The committee will ask "the central question of what kind of community are we?" Coleman told the breakfast crowd in the Dorothy Day cafeteria.
"What kind of facilities do we need? … What are the differences between what we saw in the early 1990s and what we see today in 2013? Is it one facility, is it multiple facilities? Is it simply upgrading this facility, or is it really doing something fundamentally different?"
Later, Coleman said that the task force "likely will result in a new facility of some sort," and that one example is the innovative Higher Ground housing facility that Catholic Charities opened last year in Minneapolis.