Orange County planning board backs controversial East Orlando homeless shelter
An Orange County planning board on Thursday narrowly endorsed a proposed East Orlando shelter that would deliver much-needed beds for the homeless, but the property owner’s history is raising questions about the project.
The proposal passed the Planning and Zoning Commission by a margin of 5 to 3, GrowthSpotter reported. The vote sets up a showdown before the Board of County Commissioners.
Kaleo Ministries used to operate a makeshift facility on 6.2 acres at 1717 Harrell Rd., called Hope City Refuge, that once sheltered as many as 120 people at a time in bunkhouses and repurposed storage containers. The county fire marshal shut down the facility last March with a court filing that stated conditions at Hope City Refuge posed “severe life safety issues.” The county alleged that facilities lacked proper fire detection, prevention, and suppression devices and that the ministry had long resisted fixing the problem.
Now Kaleo wants to build 120 emergency housing units, 120 transitional housing units, a 9,000-square-foot drug treatment center, and a 9,000-square-foot educational and administrative building on the site. The facility would temporarily house young adults who have aged out of the foster care system and other people experiencing homelessness. Residents could live at the facility for up to two years before transitioning into permanent or alternative housing.
