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Women’s Shelter Seeks Funds to Stay Open

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Operators of a South Bay shelter for battered women plan to launch a fund-raising drive to keep the home open after losing one-fourth of their funds in a Los Angeles County budget cut.

The county Board of Supervisors voted earlier this month to eliminate $60,000 in annual contributions to the 1736 Family Crisis Center shelter in the South Bay and a similar shelter in Glendale.

The Glendale shelter closed three days after the county action. But the Board of Directors of the 1736 center voted last week to try to keep the 12-bed shelter open by applying for an emergency loan and searching for donations.

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“If we closed down, it would leave a lot of people in very, very serious danger,” said Carol Adelkoff, director of the nonprofit agency that operates the 1736 shelter. She noted that there is a dearth of extended-care facilities for battered women and their children in Los Angeles County.

The 1736 and Glendale shelters have been used to house women and their children for up to six months after they leave “emergency” shelters, where clients can stay a maximum of 45 days. Known as transitional shelters, the two homes also have provided programs to help women find jobs, locate housing and budget their limited funds.

Adelkoff said that in the South Bay, closure of the 1736 shelter would force many women to return to abusive partners or to live on the streets.

The county funding cut will leave the shelter about $5,000 short when payroll and other expenses are due at the end of this month, she said. The shelter might be forced to close immediately if that money is not made up, she said.

The shelter’s annual budget of about $240,000 supports a staff of seven and pays the facility’s operating expenses.

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