Providence City Council Opens Makeshift Warming Center in Council Chambers

It’s a last-ditch effort to get people off the street as temperatures plummet into the low teens across Rhode Island

The City Council chambers at Providence City Hall transformed into a makeshift shelter.
The City Council chambers at Providence City Hall transformed into a makeshift shelter.
Nina Sparling / The Public’s Radio
Share
The City Council chambers at Providence City Hall transformed into a makeshift shelter.
The City Council chambers at Providence City Hall transformed into a makeshift shelter.
Nina Sparling / The Public’s Radio
Providence City Council Opens Makeshift Warming Center in Council Chambers
Copy

The council chambers at Providence City Hall transformed into an impromptu overnight warming center on Tuesday night. Volunteers dropped off hot pizza, fresh fruit, bottled water, and winter coats as unhoused people filtered in off the streets.

“I’ve got to stay here because I have nowhere else to stay. I’ve been sleeping outside,” 62-year-old Bill Bailey said. “I’m here because I could freeze to death tonight. It’s too cold.”

As they watched the forecast drop into the low teens, City Councilors Miguel Sanchez and Justin Roias decided to try a new tactic: mobilizing community resources to help fill gaps in the homeless response system.

“What we’re doing is opening up the people’s house, the council chambers, to be an overnight gathering space where folks you know, will be able to come here, put their feet up, get connected [to resources],” Sanchez said.

Sanchez said they decided to use the council chambers because it was a space they had some control over. At other facilities, like community centers or churches, they would have faced permitting issues.

“We were thinking about many different ways to fill the void and gap that has been left behind by the city’s and state’s response,” Roias said. “It’s mind-boggling because winter arrives every year and we’re always chasing emergency shelter infrastructure.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

After 7 failed restoration plans, CRMC to consider enforcement Tuesday over unauthorized rock wall
With the federal shutdown of the 988 “press 3” service for LGBTQ+ youth, Samaritans South Coast and Rhode Island’s call center are expanding culturally competent training to fill the gap in suicide prevention care
A federal judge struck down a rule allowing the National Endowment for the Arts to disfavor projects tied to ‘gender ideology,’ siding with Rhode Island Latino Arts and three other groups in a case brought by the ACLU
From Providence parks to coastal byways, Rhode Island’s fall foliage season is about to burst into color — with peak leaf-peeping expected in mid-to-late October across the Ocean State
A federal judge blasted the Trump administration’s halt of the $5 billion offshore wind project as “arbitrary and capricious,” clearing the way for Ørsted to restart work on the 65 turbines already 80% complete
Dr. Mariah Stump, a Brown University physician and lifestyle medicine expert, shares how the free community walking program builds fitness, connection, and joy across Rhode Island