Hillsdale City Council makes appointments to Homeless Task Force

Trash is left scattered around a homeless camp along the Baw Beese Trail near Baw Beese Lake in Hillsdale.
Trash is left scattered around a homeless camp along the Baw Beese Trail near Baw Beese Lake in Hillsdale.

HILLSDALE — Hillsdale City Council made a number of appointments to its newly formed Homeless Task Force.

Those appointed include Josiah Lippincott, Elisabeth Schlueter, Angie Turner, Casey Sullivan, Pat Porter, Jacob Bruns, Sarah Conley, Hillsdale County Commissioner Brad Benzing, Stephanie Myers, Julie Boyce, Councilwoman Cynthia Pratt, Jessica Spangler, Missy Desjardin, Holly Carpenter and Becky Spratt.

The city’s Public Safety Committee — chaired by Councilman Rob Socha — met Nov. 29 to begin laying the foundation for Mayor Adam Stockford’s directive to establish a Homeless Task Force that will begin addressing public safety concerns.

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The proposed foundation is to address the issue from a public safety standpoint to address concerns raised about drug use and indecent exposure at camps scattered along the Hills-Jo trail, a popular recreation trail that spans most of the city.

Ongoing discussions and comments from community members since centers around that foundation.

Ted Jansen, who has often been critical of the city council, read aloud from a letter he authored in response to the Nov. 29 Public Safety Committee meeting.

“The comments made by some of the Hillsdale elite were disgusting in their presumption that homeless individuals are a great source of lawlessness and should be feared,” Jansen said. “These comments had no factual basis but spoke of the prejudice these shirt sleeve Christians have toward those of a different class.”

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Councilman Greg Stuchell — who has often been critical of Hillsdale’s homeless — prepared the proposed foundation for the task force and has since spent time collecting data from the Hillsdale City Police, Hillsdale County Prosecutor and Hillsdale Hospital on homeless persons.

“Before we make a plan, we really need to know what we’re dealing with,” Stuchell said.

Stuchell also said a focal point for the task force will be ensuring the city does not have veterans or children living in the streets.

Melissa Desjardin, the executive director of Hillsdale Community Thrift, said her store has become a rally point for those with housing challenges in the county and that there are over 100 children in Hillsdale County who are either homeless or at risk of being homeless.

While data collection efforts are underway, Stuchell and Councilman Rob Socha said they intend to present the findings of that data to the full council by February.

Councilmen Greg Stuchell and Rob Socha discuss the foundation of the Homeless Task Force Nov. 29.
Councilmen Greg Stuchell and Rob Socha discuss the foundation of the Homeless Task Force Nov. 29.

Tracy Fowler, who has been active in working with the homeless, expressed concerns with Stuchell’s data collection efforts.

“I worry about what the data is going to say,” Fowler said. “In the data world, garbage in is garbage out. This group and this council are not the experts on our unhoused neighbors. Collaborate. Don’t invent this wheel when it already exists and it’s already being done.”

Ultimately, the council will use the data to address issues through various means up to and including ordinances or resources with a goal of eliminating camping on public lands and to protect the city’s parks and trails, Stuchell said.

An earlier attempt at establishing a Homeless Task Force in Hillsdale failed to take root largely because of the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Since then, Hillsdale’s homeless population has grown.

While many of the persons residing in the wooded areas along the Hills-Jo trail are harmless, according to Police Chief Scott Hephner, there have been some issues.

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A man recently overdosed in an encampment behind Hillsdale Buick GMC and allegations arose during a Nov. 7 Hillsdale City Council meeting that a homeless man in a wooded area near Hillsdale Academy exposed himself to a sixth grade girl.

The indecent exposure allegations were made by Dr. Nicholas Rorick who lives on Riverdale Street in town.

A letter he authored to the council prompted extended conversation on the homeless issues in early November when a handful of persons spoke during public comment on the issue and Socha called to enforce laws in the city to cut down on homeless persons loitering on public lands or in public parks.

— Corey Murray is the Public Safety Reporter for The Hillsdale Daily News, Sturgis Journal and The Daily Reporter. He can be contacted by email at cmurray@hillsdale.net. Follow him on Twitter: @cmurrayHDN.

This article originally appeared on Hillsdale Daily News: Hillsdale City Council makes appointments to Homeless Task Force