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  • Bridging Communities: 50 Years of Collecting at GSU
  • Protests for Change in Atlanta
    • Racial Tensions on Campus in 1992
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    • National Domestic Workers
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  • Making Herstory
    • Admission of Women to the Evening School of Commerce
    • Documenting the Equal Rights Amendment through the Georgia Women’s Movement Project
    • Georgia LGBTQ History Project
  • Organizations Supporting the Marginalized
    • Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless
    • People with AIDS
      • AID Atlanta
      • Jerusalem House & Joining Hearts
      • Fundraising for People with AIDS
    • Incarcerated Women: Foreverfamily
    • Battered Women
  • Support Our Work: The Dr. David B. Gracy II Endowment

Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless

"The Voice of a People Without A Home" --  The Signal, 2008-01-29

"The Voice of a People Without A Home" -- The Signal, 29 January 2008

For more than 35 years, beginning with its founding in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless served as the central coordinating agency for services to Atlantans experiencing homelessness. Funded by state and federal sources as well as high-profile benefactors, the Task Force served hundreds of thousands of people over the years, largely through The Center at Peachtree-Pine, which opened in 2007 and eventually was cited as the largest homeless shelter in the Southeast, serving up to 15,000 people each year. This included thousands of women with children, who were the fastest-growing group of Atlantans seeking housing support in the 1990s.  

Although Peachtree-Pine was the Task Force’s most visible presence in the eyes of many Atlantans, the organization’s mission and programs extended far beyond the shelter and centered on the goal of eliminating homelessness in Atlanta. Apart from the shelter, the Task Force’s other services included an assistance hotline, job training, medical screenings and referrals for care, street outreach, transportation, transitional housing, an art studio and gallery, a resident volunteer program, and data collection to track the number of people in Atlanta and the metro area experiencing homeless and compile demographic profiles of those needing services. Most fundamentally, the organization operated as a clearinghouse to connect people with short- and long-term housing and job opportunities, but the Task Force was also involved in advocacy and education around complex and still-relevant issues connected to homelessness, such as healthcare access and affordability, public housing, economic justice, and civil rights.  

The Georgia State University Signal, 2017-02-28

The Signal, 28 February 2017

Over the years, the Task Force became known not only for its essential work but also for its troubled relationships with Atlanta’s city government and the local business community and for controversies related to public health concerns and criminal activity at Peachtree-Pine. These widely reported struggles eventually led the shelter to close in 2017 and to the Task Force ceasing operations in 2019. This closure meant the end of an essential safety net for many Atlantans. It also left the Task Force and its founders and board members to grapple with a decidedly mixed legacy, and it left other advocates, who provide services to the homeless, with the challenge of overcoming negative public sentiment and building new partnerships with local government, community agencies, and funders. In part because of the organization’s complex story, preserving the records of the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless provides a window onto economic and political debates that shaped the development of Atlanta in the late 20th and early 21st centuries and, more importantly, onto the human stories of homelessness in the city, bringing attention to voices and perspectives not often documented in the formal historical record. 

The Georgia State University Signal Letter to the Editor describing the pressures being applied by the city to shut Peachtree-Pine down, The Signal, 2011-11-01
The Closing of Peachtree-Pine

Letter to the Editor describing the pressures being applied by the city to shut Peachtree-Pine down, The Signal, 1 November 2011

Link to cited article by Terry Carter, https://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/battle_of_Atlanta_fight_over_a_downtown_homeless_shelter_strains/

Architectural rendering of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter renovation plans. Founded in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless has consistently served as the central coordinating agency for services to individuals who are homeless. The task force has served several hundred thousand individuals over the years.

Architectural rendering of a roof top garden, proposed renovations for the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter that never came to fruition, circa 2005

Architectural rendering of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter renovation plans. Founded in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless has consistently served as the central coordinating agency for services to individuals who are homeless. The task force has served several hundred thousand individuals over the years.

Architectural rendering of proposed renovations for the exterior of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter that never came to fruition, circa 2005

Architectural rendering of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter renovation plans. Founded in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless has consistently served as the central coordinating agency for services to individuals who are homeless. The task force has served several hundred thousand individuals over the years.

Food court rendering for the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter, circa 2005

Architectural rendering of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter renovation plans. Founded in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless has consistently served as the central coordinating agency for services to individuals who are homeless. The task force has served several hundred thousand individuals over the years.

Architectural rendering of the floor plan, proposed renovations for the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter that never came to fruition, circa 2005

Architectural rendering of the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter renovation plans. Founded in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless has consistently served as the central coordinating agency for services to individuals who are homeless. The task force has served several hundred thousand individuals over the years.

Additional floor plans for the Peachtree-Pine renovations, circa 2005

Architectural rendering of  the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter renovation plans. Founded in 1981, the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless has consistently served as the central coordinating agency for services to individuals who are homeless. The task force has served several hundred thousand individuals over the years.

Additional floor plans for the Peachtree-Pine homeless shelter, 2005

City of Atlanta comprehensive development plan pages 3 and 479, documenting the cities commitment and support of the Task Force<br />

City of Atlanta comprehensive development plan pages 3 and 479, documenting the cities commitment and support of the Task Force in 1995

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Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless

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