West Valley City | February 2024

Page 1

FREE

February 2024 | Vol. 10 Iss. 2

WEST VALLEY CITY WINTER OVERFLOW HOMELESS SHELTER OFFERS A PLACE TO STAY….AND HOPE By Darrell Kirby | d.kirby@mycityjournals.com)

T

hings are looking up in the world of Bruce Rodriguez. The 35-year-old Salt Lake City native recently returned to Utah after spending time in Arizona. “I was homeless,” he said. “I came here to have a better life.” He attributes his homelessness to “my situation, my decisions,” without elaborating. The climb to what Rodriguez hopes will be a “better life” has already begun. He recently got a job at a Chuck E. Cheese restaurant and is saving money to eventually land an apartment. For now, he also has a place to stay, though it’s not ideal. He, along with 170 other people on this January day, were staying at a temporary winter overflow shelter inside a former state liquor store in West Valley City. The shelter at 3380 S. Redwood Road opened Nov. 1 and will operate through April 30 with funding from the state and other sources. It is managed by St. George-based nonprofit Switchpoint which partners with government agencies and other organizations to provide homeless services, including case management and running shelters like this one. Paulina Barrios is the shelter’s director of operations. “We are here to support the homeless resource centers (in Salt Lake County) throughout the wintertime,” she said. When those centers are full, she explained, the homeless are referred to overflow facilities like the one in West Valley City. The West Valley City shelter is open only to single men and couples 18 years and older and their pets if they have them. A cat on a leash could be seen in one corner of the shelter. Couples stay in one section of the facility while the single men take up the rest of the floor space. Barrios knows some of the obstacles faced by the shelter’s residents, having experienced homelessness and addiction herself earlier in life. The living and sleeping areas are separated by cubbyContinued page 15

Emergency Tree Services Tree Trimming and Removal Stump Grinding Tree Health Care Organic Mulch Demolition Residential & Commercial

A former state liquor store at 3380 S. Redwood Road is now a temporary winter homeless shelter. (Darrell Kirby/City Journals)

Winter Tree Damage?

This is a job for the Experts!

Call Diamond Tree Experts Today!

801-938-4345

Now Accepting Green Waste at our Magna Yard!

DiamondTreeExperts.com

Now Hiring! Up to $80K 801.262.1596 Certified Arborist on Staff

30 OFF %

50+ Years of Experience

Winter Tree Services

Must present coupon at time of estimate. Expires 3/15/24

7774 West SR201 - Magna, UT Commercial & Residential


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
West Valley City | February 2024 by The City Journals - Issuu