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Globe/B.W. Shepherd Brian Bisbee, a director of the Carthage Crisis Center, shows off an outdoor area at the center’s remodeled location. The center is seeking volunteers to help with its move to its new location. Globe/B.W. Shepherd Brian Bisbee, a director of the Carthage Crisis Center, shows off an outdoor area at the center’s remodeled location. The center is seeking volunteers to help with its move to its new location.

Published July 10, 2009 11:10 pm - CARTHAGE, Mo. — Volunteers with strong backs will be needed at the end of the month when the Carthage Crisis Center moves to new, larger headquarters at Main Street and Central Avenue.
But Brian and Marilyn Bisbee believe the help will come. The couple, co-directors of the homeless shelter, say the Carthage area has always been willing to lift up the Crisis Center and its programs, including fund-raising and renovation projects that will allow the move from a former filling station into the former Leggett & Platt national research center.


Carthage Crisis Center planning move



By Susan Redden

sredden@joplinglobe.com

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Volunteers with strong backs will be needed at the end of the month when the Carthage Crisis Center moves to new, larger headquarters at Main Street and Central Avenue.

But Brian and Marilyn Bisbee believe the help will come. The couple, co-directors of the homeless shelter, say the Carthage area has always been willing to lift up the Crisis Center and its programs, including fund-raising and renovation projects that will allow the move from a former filling station into the former Leggett & Platt national research center.

Brian Bisbee cites an instance recently when he said his wife had been praying over the need for mattress covers to go on new bedding for the new shelter.

“She put the need for mattress and pillow covers in our newsletter and before we had all of them distributed, a woman came in to tell Marilyn that her boss wanted to take care of that,” he said. “This building is full of stories like that.”

The building was donated by Leggett & Platt, which also supplied all new bedding for center rooms to house residents and staff. And a request by L&P officials to furniture manufacturers it supplies resulted in the donation and delivery of truckloads of new couches and chairs.

The center’s energy efficient lighting was donated by H.E. Williams of Carthage, Galbraith’s donated the floor tile used in some of the rooms, Lowe’s employees helped outfit a children’s play area, dining chairs were donated and most of the kitchen equipment was donated or bought at auction.

“It’s interesting how all the pieces have come together,” Bisbee said.

In addition to a $1.9 million renovation budget, much of the work to prepare the building has been done by volunteers, with hundreds of hours of labor coming from Crisis Center residents.

“A group from the First Baptist Church in Bourbon came down to help the First Baptist Church here with Bible school last week,” said Bisbee. “Two of their men worked with us full-time, and all the other folks were here helping when they weren’t at Bible school.”

On Friday, a partition in one of the new bathrooms was being painted by volunteer Kate Kennedy, of Carthage.

“I just felt like I should help,” said Kennedy, now a junior at the University of Arkansas.

The current, 16-bed center often is at capacity, and Bisbee said there is a growing need for additional shelter space, especially by families.

“With the economy, we’re seeing more people who need help, like families that can’t pay their rent,” he said.



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