JANESVILLE, Wis. — GIFTS Men's Shelter recently offered accommodations to a man who walked out of the woods along the Rock River and told staff he couldn't stand one more night of sleeping under bare trees on the cold ground.
At the House of Mercy Homeless Center, a family of five with nowhere else to go just moved in, joining about 15 others at the shelter.
Those are just a few recent late-season guests at local homeless shelters who are seeking respite as blistering-cold winter weather looms and the coronavirus pandemic rages out of control.
For shelters that are the last port for the homeless to evade potentially deadly cold weather, this winter will only bring more complexities—and perhaps more uncertainty than ever before, The Janesville Gazette reported.
For one thing, shelter officials say they're still operating under county health restrictions that reduce the number of homeless clients they can house.
GIFTS Director John Koesema said the shelter likely will scale back its occupancy even more to fit the Rock County Public Health Department's new COVID-19 recommendation this week that businesses and public places—including nonprofit agencies—limit their occupancy to 25% capacity. The guidance means GIFTS could fill just 11 of the 42 beds at its shelter and recovery center on the city's west side.
Officials say the county has yet to decide how it might manage emergency warming centers that operate during dangerous cold snaps. Meanwhile, some state unemployment benefits and a state moratorium on apartment evictions are set to expire in December, which could spell an influx of new shelter guests, officials said.
House of Mercy Manager Tammie King-Johnson said her shelter continues to operate under the county's earlier, phase-two COVID-19 recovery guidelines that recommend public places limit occupancy to 50% capacity.