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NewsApril 3, 2017

ST. LOUIS -- A judge didn't immediately put the brakes on St. Louis' plan to temporarily house homeless men displaced by the closure of a downtown shelter in a building used for gardening equipment and vehicles. But Circuit Judge Robert Dierker said Friday that he wants to hear more from opponents...

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS -- A judge didn't immediately put the brakes on St. Louis' plan to temporarily house homeless men displaced by the closure of a downtown shelter in a building used for gardening equipment and vehicles. But Circuit Judge Robert Dierker said Friday that he wants to hear more from opponents.

The St. Louis civil rights law firm ArchCity Defenders and the Saint Louis University School of Law Legal Clinic sued after the Rev. Larry Rice announced Thursday that he was going to vacate the New Life Evangelistic Center by Sunday. The decision came after another judge sided with the city in denying Rice's shelter permission to remain open.

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While Dierker denied the request for temporary restraining order, he set a hearing for Wednesday on a preliminary injunction the opponents are seeking.

Rice, whose shelter has been operating without an occupancy permit since May 2015, said the site attracts about 150 people each night. But he acknowledged that the number of people camping out overnight in front of his shelter has grown exponentially in recent months, drawing complaints from nearby residents and businesses. The city revoked the permit due to chronic over-occupancy and building codes violations.

Opponents said in seeking a preliminary injunction that a city-owned building that houses the forestry division is "not suitable for habitability by humans." Cots already have been laid out on a concrete floor, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports.

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