Politics & Government
Group Home Moratorium Tied to Foster Home Zoning Application
The decision was advised by the Planning Commission and approved during last night's council meeting.

The decision to place a moratorium on group homes in Snellville came after CHRIS Home Properties, LLC, requested a zoning variance for the group home for foster children at 2552 Poplar Street.
CHRIS Homes requested that the house be given a Conditional Use Permit during the last scheduled Planning Commission meeting. They also requested a variance from an ordinance that requires a group home to sit on at least one acre of land. The property on Poplar Street sits on a little over half an acre.
The submission of the application comes after a Feb. 27, 2012, decision that requires group homes of this type to obtain a Conditional Use Permit to operate. To date, the group home operating as CHRIS Kids, Inc., does not have such a permit approved, nor have they obtained an approved Occupational Tax Certificate (business license) from the city.
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CHRIS Kids has been in operation for 22 years and is a home for at risk youth through the age of 18. The children living in the home have been in and out of foster homes, according to CHRIS Kids CEO Kath Colbenson, and have behavioral and emotional problems stemming from physical and sexual abuse, neglect and trauama.
Colbenson said during the planning commission meeting that there have been several success stories, including the kids going on to college, getting adopted or being re-unified with their original families.
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The problem, though, is the high level of incidence reports filed with the Snellville Police Department related to the group home. According to Snellville Police, a total of 64 calls for service were made since 2008.
From March 1, 2011 through May 31, 2012, there were 36 calls for service requiring 22 incident reports.
Most of the calls generated from inside the home. Around 55% of the calls were state mandated, (the state mandates that police are called when a child walks out of eyesight or violates a condition of probation if they are on probation), 20% were medical related, 15% were for altercations and 5% were calls made by the kids because they were angry about something.
City Planner Jon Davis and Police Chief Roy Whitehead met with the COO of CHRIS Kids, Cindy Simpson, to “address the calls for service generating from the group home,” according to Planning Commission meeting notes.
Simpson indicated that staffing changes have been made at the group home to eliminate the need for police services.
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