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Escanaba women’s recovery center opens through Catholic, Lutheran joint effort

Courtesy photo People gather on the lawn of the Women’s Recovery Home in Escanaba waiting for a ribbon cutting. The home is available to women recovering from addictions and is a joint effort of Catholic Social Services of the U.P. and Bethany Lutheran Church in Escanaba.

ESCANABA — Catholics and Lutherans have joined forces to open the new women’s recovery home in Escanaba. The home is for women, especially mothers with addictions, to learn to live soberly and then return to their families.

Rev. Terry Frankenstein, pastor of Bethany Lutheran church, said she was tasked with finding a new use for the parsonage located next to the church on South 11th Street. When approached by Catholic Deacon Terry Saunders concerning its possible use by Catholic Social Services of the U.P. for the recovery home, she knew it was the right fit.

However, it wasn’t as simple as that. The parishioners would have to meet and vote to allow the new use. She proudly pointed out that her flock’s vote to open the parsonage to those in great need was passed unanimously. She also noted that Escanaba’s planning commission also voted unanimously in favor of the project.

The brick home housed pastors of the parish and their families from 1922 to 2019. Now it will provide a warm, nurturing atmosphere for up to six residents and one house manager. Bishop Katherine Finegan, bishop of the Northern Great Lakes Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, said she was happy that the church could provide a “safe space for transformation” where the residents could be “held by a community of faith.”

“This has been a great opportunity for Catholic Social Services and Bethany Lutheran to provide these services to the city of Escanaba. We could not have done this without the support of the city of Escanaba that clearly understood the need for recovery housing,” Kyle Rambo, director of Catholic Social Services of the U.P.

He quoted Catholic Diocese of Marquette’s Bishop John Doerfler as calling the house a “home for healing.”

It is expected that the need for the home will be greater than the rooms available. Rambo said priority will go to pregnant women or those who are at risk of losing their children, which follows state of Michigan requirements.

During a short service was held in the church prior to the ribbon cutting Thursday.

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