Perhaps it's the best laid plans story or perhaps the poorly laid plans story but when a nonprofit decides to leave a community and release itself from its assets, I wonder what the nonprofit's board was thinking when they made the commitment in the first place. Case in point.
According to the Columbus Telegram:
Boys and Girls Home of Nebraska will be ending its Columbus operations, leaving tenants of Columbus Family Resource Center without leases after August of this year.
The tenants, including Columbus Area United Way, Nebraska Workforce Development, Boy Scouts of America, Connect Columbus, Catholic Charities, a Central Community College-Columbus satellite office and others, were informed by letter that their leases would be terminated Aug. 31 as Boys and Girls Home looks to pull out of the city.
Boys and Girls Home lists high maintenance and utility costs as a factor for the closure. It also states that the agency would be willing to negotiate a sale of the building to any interested tenants.
In the past year, social service agencies in the building had faced rent increases as the Boys and Girls Home made an effort to remain viable.
Among the services offered by Boys and Girls Home is a residential program for troubled youths.
I might offer that this is a good opportunity for the building's current tenants to ban together and buy the building and share the costs, creating another nonprofit they mutually own for this purpose.