St Pete Times article part 1
Neighbors take issue with group residence
Some North Shore residents are concerned about the proposed group home for mentally retarded clients.
By JON WILSON
?¿½ St. Petersburg Times,
published July 29, 2001
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ST. PETERSBURG -- A planned home for six mentally retarded people has upset some residents in a North Shore neighborhood.
Goodwill Industries-Suncoast plans to open the home on 18th Avenue NE in mid August, the agency's officials say.
Residents got wind of the plans before Goodwill had a chance to schedule an open house to discuss the home. Many attended a neighborhood meeting earlier this month to object, among them former City Council member Ron Mason.
Mason lives near the home, which is about a block off Beach Drive. He declined to discuss the home last week.
''I've been sworn to silence,'' Mason said.
''It's a very delicate situation.''
The North Shore Neighborhood Association, meanwhile, has taken no position and in fact, association president Susan Rebillot said that if the home does open, association leadership ''will go welcome them.''
But Mason and 15 to 20 other residents have asked lawyer Jim Martin to look into the issue.
Martin, who lives on Ninth Avenue NE in North Shore, was a major neighborhood spokesman last year when residents were concerned about a CVS drug store planned for Ninth Avenue N and Fourth Street.
Differences between residents and the developer were resolved, and Martin is hoping for a similar outcome regarding the Goodwill home.
''It's the sort of thing where my clients just want more information,'' Martin said. He expected to meet with Goodwill representatives late Friday.
Martin has asked city government to reconsider its definition of the Goodwill facility as a community residential home, rather than a social service agency. City codes allow community residential homes in areas zoned single-family, as 18th Avenue NE is, but does not permit facilities defined as social service agencies in such neighborhoods.
But the city has no role in this matter, said Pam Cichon, assistant city attorney.
''The North Shore residents should take their complaint to the state,'' Cichon said. She said Florida statutes defining community residential homes ''are unusually clear.''
In recent years, governments have been working toward moving mentally retarded or mentally ill people out of institutions into smaller homes where they can live more normal lives.
The Goodwill home would be about a block off Beach Drive in the heart of a section where owners often pay in the middle to high six figures for their homes. The home at issue is assessed at $169,400, but would doubtless sell for more. Goodwill officials say they will pay owner Steve Gruskin about $2,500 a month in rent.
Gruskin, who lives in San Francisco, could not be reached.
Men and women in their 30s would live in the home. Some would move from a larger Goodwill group home, and all are in Goodwill day programs from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily.
''All of them have been with us for a long number of years,'' said Jean-Marie Moore, Goodwill's human services operations director.
The home would be supervised in shifts, but no supervisor would live on the premises.
Martin said his clients are not a ''not-in-my-back yard'' group -- a term generally shortened to ''nimby,'' referring to people who say they support the idea of governments and agencies helping people but don't want facilities near them.
Still, there is concern that the Goodwill home could set a precedent, Martin said.
article continues on part 2 due to a 500 words limit.