Commentary: Building a Community of Hope

Photo: Selfie, taken in front of Montpelier City Hall (circa: 10/6/2022).

During the most recent regular Montpelier City Council meeting, held on the evening of Wednesday, August 28, 2024, the potential sale and development of the 12 - 16 Main Street lot came up for discussion (agenda item 11).

This had previously been the site of the former Guertin Parklet structure, which the city had removed over two years ago, amidst the height of controversy and NIMBYism (Not In My Back Yard) or, rather, NOPE (Not On Planet Earth) concerning people living unhoused outdoors who were often occupying the small gazebo because they had nowhere else to go.


My personal dream, hope and vision for the currently vacant property would be to have a four and possibly up to six story structure designed, developed and built that would house a bottle and can redemption center as well as a community center located on a lower floor, an emergency shelter with single rooms for people living unhoused outdoors above that floor, with transitional housing units above it and permanent housing for the same population above that floor, making for a four floor building. 


If there were six floors to the structure, it could possibly include a parking area underneath the redemption center as well as community center floor, yet still be built above the floodplain as required by the city's zoning code and policy. The sixth floor could be mixed housing. Either that or, absent a parking area underneath, the fifth and sixth floors could both be dedicated to mixed housing. The building would also include an elevator in order to provide much needed accessibility to those who require it. 


The bottle and can redemption center could primarily employ people who were currently living unhoused as well as those who had formerly lived unhoused as paid employees.


Among other functions that it could serve, the community center could become the primary meal site providing meals to members of the community as well as the surrounding area, currently served by various churches and hosted at Christ Episcopal Church on State Street on weekdays, yet do so seven days a week and serve both breakfast and lunch. Besides the usual volunteers, the meal site could train as well as employ those who either are currently living unhoused or formerly lived unhoused in the culinary arts as paid employees, helping to prep them for further employment in commercial kitchens and restaurants in the region as well as beyond.


This is not merely worth dreaming, envisioning and hoping, but in my opinion is definitely very much worth doing for the benefit as well as sake of the entire community as a whole.



Bio: Morgan W. Brown, recently retired from engaging in volunteer citizen advocacy and activism, is a blogger and writer currently residing in Montpelier. He had previously lived unhoused over the course of many years of his adult life.

For additional information, read a previous blog post concerning these and related matters, here.

As published:

Commentary, as published by Times Argus, f

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