Survivors of human trafficking will be able to move into a new affordable housing development in Columbus starting Dec. 1.
Harriet鈥檚 Hope will be a sober living community with 52 apartments 鈥 47 one-bedroom apartments and five two-bedroom family units. The facility will offer a variety of support services, including substance abuse disorder treatment and mental health, workforce development and financial literacy services. The facility's exact location was not given.
At a Monday event at the state capitol celebrating the development鈥檚 completion, Celia Kendall, chief executive officer at the Columbus-based real estate nonprofit Beacon 360, said she recalls meeting a 27-year-old woman who was eight months pregnant and being trafficked out of a motel in Chicago.
鈥淎nd after I left my interaction with her, the thing that bothered me the most is I could have helped, but I had no place for her,鈥 Kendall said.
Harriet's Hope is the result of partnerships between Beacon 360, the Columbus Metropolitan Housing Authority, the city of Columbus, Ohio Capital Corporation for Housing and Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, among others. Aetna CVS Health put $10.6 million toward the project, said Latasha Brown, CVS/Aetna鈥檚 anti-human trafficking administrator.
Stephen Daley with the Columbus Metropolitan Housing Agency says the 鈥渢ransformative project鈥 aims to answer a complex question of how to transform housing into opportunity.
鈥淎 large part of the answer is to reduce the barriers that separate our residents from the opportunity structures of the larger community,鈥 Daley said. 鈥淗arriet鈥檚 Hope aims to do just that with wraparound services, onsite security and the promise of privacy.鈥
The development is named for abolitionist Harriet Tubman, who helped many people escape slavery.
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost noted that there is a law enforcement aspect to stopping human trafficking but said that while traffickers need to be put in prison, more must be done for survivors who had been dependent on traffickers for food and shelter.
鈥淔or our survivors, having the opportunity to rebuild their lives, that鈥檚 something much more than merely exiting the life,鈥 he said.