On a Thursday at 4:30 p.m., a vacant lot off 22nd Street between
Columbus Boulevard and Swan Road is teeming with people, even though
dark monsoon clouds are creeping closer from the southeast side of
town. The lot will soon be covered in rain, but for now, people remain
in line for a dinner dished out on paper plates; later, they can pick
up canned foods and clothes, plus treats for kids, as offered every
Thursday and Sunday evening.
This is a place where you’d think kids would be sticking to their
parents’ sides or hiding behind a mother’s leg. Instead, most of them
are huddled together—and singing—near the entrance of the
lot, surrounding a woman wearing a wide-brimmed sun hat.
Libby Wright is exactly the person they want to be near, the person
they want to hug and touch.
A few mothers stand outside the periphery of this circle with their
toddlers, but even those youngsters eventually leave the security of
their mothers, walking gingerly toward the middle, holding their
bottles with one hand and searching out Wright with the other.
Despite the smiles and singing, these are difficult times for Wright
and the organization she founded more than 15 years ago to help
children and the homeless.
From her perspective, The Giving Tree is under attack. When Wright
sits down to talk about who or what is behind the attacks against the
nonprofit organization she works for as a volunteer director, a list of
other nonprofit organizations and state agencies roll off her
tongue—but lately, she’s blaming more of the attacks on the city
of Tucson.
The organization’s Compassionate Hope Center—a building north
of 22nd Street off Swan Road that’s part church, part shelter, part
homeless kitchen—recently received notice from the city’s Code
Enforcement Division that the organization is in violation and could
permanently lose its occupancy certification.
In April, representatives from the city arrived at the center with
Tucson Police Department officers in the middle of the night, according
to Wright. The Giving Tree was given a notice that it was in violation
of specific city codes, and told it couldn’t continue to operate a
shelter until a decision was made by the city’s board of appeals.
Code officers noted that the building was being used as an overnight
shelter and housing more than 50 people inside, while others were found
sleeping outside, in the yard, on the porch or in sheds. According to
the city notice, some of those sleeping inside were blocking exits,
creating a fire hazard. The city notice points out that the building’s
maximum occupancy load of 108 was given when the organization opened
the center as a church, not as a shelter.
Wright has a different perspective. She explains that The Giving
Tree is a nondenominational faith-based organization, and that the
Compassionate Hope Center serves as its church. Wright points out that
during the winter, other churches and faith-based organizations open
their doors to offer shelter on cold winter nights for a project called
Project Hospitality. The program receives local, state and federal
funds—but The Giving Tree does not participate.
Wright says the winter project was something homeless activists had
to fight the city to do—and Wright adds that she’s all about
doing things her own way, which is not necessarily the way other
organizations think she should operate. That’s why she offers shelter
at the center year-round.
“Just look at the book of Acts in the Bible. It tells you what
you’re supposed to be doing as a church: Feed the hungry; cloth the
naked; and house the homeless and the widows, or I should say widowers
nowadays,” Wright says.
From the small office at the Compassionate Hope Center, Wright can
see a room full of familiar faces. Most live in one of the four houses
that serve as transitional housing shelters owned by The Giving Tree in
a neighborhood south of 22nd Street. They are there on Tuesday for a
mandatory Christian-themed discussion on living a purposeful life.
“What am I supposed to do? Most people who show up here are without
a place to stay. They come and knock on our door. We can’t turn them
away,” Wright says.
From the other side of the window, two young boys peer through the
glass to catch Wright’s attention. Once Wright leaves the office, those
same two boys wrap their arms around her. Some of the adults try to
talk to Libby or share a problem; she tells a few of them to call the
office in the morning.
But for the kids, she sits down—she pays attention.
It’s a gift given by God, Wright explains.
Children have always loved her, and children are the reason she got
into this field. Wright says she was born in Greenland, and left in
1972 to start a new life in the United States. She has two grown sons;
one is a firefighter, and the other is in the U.S. Navy. When her first
son was an infant, Wright says, she was working full-time, but she
found herself in financial trouble. The two lived in her car in Los
Angeles until they got back on their feet.
During her days in L.A., she says, she met her husband, who owned a
high-end Beverly Hills hair salon called Tease. When he sold his
business, and they sold their home, they bought an RV, packed up the
kids and spent a lot of time traveling around the country before
settling in Tucson.
One day, a little boy showed up at her door and asked her if he
could borrow a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
“He was being raised by his grandmother. She was trying to raise
eight grandkids. After we fed him, he came back with his cousins,
brothers and sisters in tow, because they were hungry, too,” Wright
recalls.
“(The grandmother) couldn’t keep up, didn’t have food, and she just
needed some help. I figured some people might have called (Child
Protective Services), but I didn’t.”
Today, she says, it isn’t unusual for her phone to ring nonstop on
Mother’s Day and Christmas.
“People say to me there’s something that kids see in me. I know what
it is. I love kids, and kids can see that. I think that’s because I am
called by God to do this. I think the children who’ve been brought to
our homes understand that I love them, too.”
During a tour of the four homes The Giving Tree uses for
transitional housing in the Myers neighborhood east of Swan Road and
south of 22nd Street, the kids are ecstatic to see Wright. Each house
looks like a typical family home—toys are on the floor as
children are playing; TVs are on as kids take naps or parents read in
the bedrooms (each with two or three sets of bunk beds); some people
are making snacks in the kitchen.
While walking between houses, Wright says that each person who
arrives goes through a background check and an intake procedure. Most,
Wright says, are women leaving a domestic-violence situation; others
are single fathers or mothers, working to keep their family together
after the death of a spouse. Wright says she’s even been contacted by
law enforcement to house people in witness protection.
When Wright is asked how the neighbors feel about the homes and the
Compassionate Hope Center, she says there have never been any
complaints.
Everyone gets along with The Giving Tree, she says.
Shortly after Wright tells the Tucson Weekly that The Giving
Tree’s facilities are well-liked by their neighbors, the Arizona
Daily Star publishes a series of three stories about the city
issuing the aforementioned notice of violation.
In one of the stories, the president of the neighborhood association
where the Compassionate Hope Center sits is quoted as complaining about
the center, saying the neighbors have had problems with the
organization since the center opened in 2005.
Wright told the Weekly the neighbors have been pleased,
because The Giving Tree took a boarded-up building and fixed it up.
They’ve also followed all other city code requirements—a
sprinkler system goes throughout the 2,200-square-foot building, and a
fire-suppression system was installed in the commercial kitchen.
When Robert Bowers, president of the Toumey Park Neighborhood
Association, talks to the Weekly about the Compassionate Hope
Center, he says neighbors complained to the city for more than a year
before officials finally appeared on the scene to inspect the center at
4 a.m. one April morning. He wonders what took the city so long.
“When it first opened in 2005, it didn’t take long for the
neighborhood to realize The Giving Tree misrepresented itself (as just
a church),” Bowers says.
In 2006, it became obvious the building was a homeless shelter,
Bowers says. Between 2007 and 2008, neighbors saw crime activity
increase 52 percent within a one-block radius of the center.
In May 2007, Bowers called the city and asked them to look at
possible code violations. The building is zoned as residential, and
because it’s a church, it is allowed to have an occupancy of 108 for
church activities. If it is a shelter, Bowers says, The Giving Tree
needs a license and a different zoning code.
“All we were asking is that the city apply its own laws and look at
the center a little more closely,” Bowers says.
Finally, the city did—and Development Services director Ernie
Duarte denied The Giving Tree’s appeal. The case will now go before the
city’s board of appeals on Friday, Aug. 14, at 2 p.m. in Public Works,
201 N. Stone Ave., in Conference Room C.
Vickie Mesimer has heard people in her neighborhood complain
about The Giving Tree, but she decided to be a friend rather than an
angry neighbor.
Mesimer is a former president of the Myers Neighborhood
Association and lives just down the street from The Giving Tree’s four
transitional-housing homes. Mesimer is also the current chair of
the 29th Street Coalition, a group of five neighborhoods that have
worked together for five years to successfully decrease violent crime
by 54 percent.
“I’ve known (Libby Wright) for five years, and I absolutely love
what she’s trying to do, but it seems to me she has her hands full, and
the number of people who are homeless in Tucson seems to be growing,”
Mesimer says.
Mesimer says that Wright seems to have trouble saying no, as
evidenced by the large number of people staying in each of The Giving
Tree homes in her neighborhood.
The neighbors get upset and call Mesimer with their
complaints—about The Giving Tree residents leaving cigarette
butts on the sidewalks, or a spike in thefts, or perhaps too many
people loitering in the area.
“I know in the past, she had strict rules when she first started
out, but she also recruits from within. The house parents are former
clients, and I just don’t think she really knows everything that’s
always going on, as she has in the past. But I want you to know I
support her; I just think it’s gotten too big for her,” Mesimer says.
Mesimer says she feels stuck in the middle, because she
easily sees both sides. She worked with Wright to get The Giving Tree’s
residents more involved in the neighborhood. Last year, they came out
to help neighbors finish work on a park.
When neighbors do complain, Mesimer tells them to work it
out.
“If they are upset by the cigarette butts, go get an ashtray for
them. Maybe that’s what they need,” she says. “I’ve worked to keep the
lines of communication open, but it’s hard to explain that to other
neighbors, especially when our home values are going down as it is, and
many are worried this could affect our property values even more.”
The Tucson Weekly heard from several nonprofit-agency staff
members and executive directors who’ve had great difficulty working
with Wright, but almost no one wanted to go on the record.
However, Jill Rich, a longtime volunteer with many organizations in
town including Jewish Refugee Resettlement of Southern Arizona, agreed
to comment. Rich says past dealings with The Giving Tree have made her
feel something is not right about the organization.
Rich says The Giving Tree claims it has a refugee program, which she
thinks is misleading. There are only a handful of selected
organizations that offer refugee programming, from housing to job
counseling to case management. Federal funds go to these
agencies—and The Giving Tree is not recognized as a refugee
organization, Rich says.
But what really put Rich off is the fact that her agency once needed
a place for a refugee family to stay temporarily, and Wright told Rich
she’d take the family.
“But we’d have to pay to get them in,” Rich says she was told. “We
made other arrangements for them.”
Brian Flagg is director of Casa Maria, a feeding program that relies
heavily on volunteers. Flagg says he’s always had a different
perspective—one that may not be popular with other nonprofit
directors.
“I tend to like The Giving Tree, although I’m not totally (coming)
from an informed position. I’ve only met Libby once, but they seem to
be a grassroots group that’s really into serving the people,” Flagg
says.
Dollars are a big issue right now in the nonprofit community,
especially those serving the hungry and the homeless. Flagg says there
are a lot of turf wars between organizations, and perhaps that’s where
some of the ill will toward Wright comes from; after all, Wright is
known as someone who breaks the rules and runs her organization the way
she sees fit.
“If people are mad at her because she’s breaking a bunch of rules,
well, that’s probably a good thing,” Flagg says.
However, Rich says The Giving Tree has a reputation for not doing
proper case management with their clients, and that Wright has a
tendency to get angry at other agencies doing the same work.
The winter-housing program, for example, came under attack by Wright
when code enforcement first inspected the Compassionate Hope Center and
questioned her using the space as a shelter.
“She got nasty and complained about other churches. It’s a vicious
approach. That’s just not the way the game is played. In addition, none
of their clients are case-managed, and the nice thing about case
management is that it leads to a positive outcome,” Rich says.
“I believe in grassroots activism. I’m the first one to be a
believer in grassroots movements, but it has to be done with some
accountability. You just can’t have a lot of people staying in one
place, men and women and children together. It has to be safe.”
When Wright looks at the notice of violation from the city, she
shakes her head as she points out that officials found a man sleeping
in a shed in the yard.
“That was probably Bruce,” Wright says.
The Giving Tree has a restraining order against Bruce; Wright
describes him as an unstable man who was eventually asked to leave the
center.
“I’m sure he’s the person who called to complain to the city about
us,” Wright says.
If he did, Bruce isn’t the only person who has complained to the
city. Tara Drew, a 30-year-old mother of two children, says she
recently wrote a sworn statement for the City Attorney’s Office
regarding her experience as a client of The Giving Tree.
Drew says the statement was requested as part of a city
investigation. (City Attorney Mike Rankin did not return calls asking
for comment.)
Drew says she worked for 17 years, but she lost her job and became
depressed, which led to her becoming homeless—and she turned to
The Giving Tree.
In early November, Drew says, someone told her about the
organization. She went to the Compassionate Hope Center with her two
children and lived there for several days, until, she says, she
realized it wasn’t the best environment for her children. She asked
about other options, and the person in charge told her about Grace
Home, one of the four transitional homes The Giving Tree operates.
Drew says she left the home in early April, after a series of events
that she describes as “just not right.” One issue: She was waiting for
a $1,500 income-tax return. Drew says the organization screens
everyone’s mail and looks for government-issued checks, and clients are
required to open the check envelopes in the presence of Giving Tree
staffers. Drew says that when her check arrived, the house parent
called Wright, who then told Drew to go to her bank to cash the
check.
“I was told I had to give The Giving Tree $600 by 10 a.m. the next
morning, or I would have to leave,” Drew says.
She gave the money, and on March 5, she gave $600 more. Drew says
that when she couldn’t afford to give more, she was asked to leave.
During her stay, she says, she felt threatened, and at one time was
held in the house parent’s room until she agreed to give The Giving
Tree $600.
After leaving, Drew went to the Salvation Army for help. The intake
was formal, rather than verbal, as it was when she first arrived at the
Compassionate Hope Center. Through the Salvation Army, Drew says, she
and her two children were set up in a motel room, and she was enrolled
in an employment program through Pima County.
“Now I’m in a duplex on my own, and I’m working 40 hours a week in a
job,” Drew says. “That never seemed a possibility when I was at The
Giving Tree.”
The Giving Tree’s board president, Dick Mentzer, says he’s always
thought that the charges to clients—from the $300 a month
requested for those living in transitional housing, to the $8.50
charged for a place to sleep and a shower at the Compassionate Hope
Center—were program fees.
“(Wright) pretty much calls the shots there; she put this all
together,” Mentzer says when asked how the board will respond to the
allegations made by Drew and the city of Tucson. “She would do anything
for these people. Probably we pushed the envelope a little by having so
many people in there. But Libby’s always said it’s far safer inside in
the building like this, where they have people around them, rather than
outside.”
Mentzer says the board is more like an advisory board that has no
control over its executive director.
“When you see all the good coming from what we do, it seems that it
works for the good, but maybe the problem is we’re trying to do too
much too soon,” he says.
This article appears in Aug 6-12, 2009.



I would have been more interesting if the reporter would have questioned Ms. Wright and Mr. Mentzer about the multiple non-profits controlled by Ms. Wright.
Records with the Arizona Corporation Commission show that Ms.Wright has four non-profits at 4888 E. Broadway Blvd.
The Giving Tree II
Board of Directors: Libby Wright
The Giving Tree Outreach Program Inc.
Board of Directors: Libby Wright
Compassion Hope Center
Board of Directors: Libby Wright
The GT Outreach Program Inc.
Board of Directors: Libby Wright & Dick Mentzer
In addition, the Arizona Corporation Commission website regarding THE GIVING TREE II.
Statement of Finacical Position for year the year ended 12/31/2007.
(note: the 2008 annual report is delinquent)
ASSETS
OTHER CHECKING = $315,547.25
OTHER FIXED ASSETS = $468,042.39
TOTAL ASSETS = $783,589.64
LIABILITIES
OTHER CREDIT CARDS = $12,948.42
OTHER PAYROLL = $1,280.05
MORTGAGES = $204,596.73
TOTAL LIABLILITIES = $218,825.20
GRAND TOTAL = $564,764.44
Regarding property owned by the non-profits.
A search of the Assessor’s office records at their website shows three parcel owned by GT OUTREACH PROGRAM
on 4888 E BROADWAY.
#122182050; with addresses of 1202/1204 N. Dodge Blvd. (a duplex)
#126133770; with addresses of 4650 E. Eastland, 730/732 S. Swan (a church)
and
#131041910; with address of 4701 E 25TH ST (a single family residence)
The story could have been far more revealing about just what Ms. Wright is doing.
In my opinion, it appeared that Mr. Mentzer was trying to put some distance between Ms. Wright’s running of the non-profits from the statement quoted in the story “‘(Wright) pretty much calls the shots there; she put this all together,’Mentzer says” and “Mentzer says the board is more like an advisory board that has no control over its executive director.”
A board with no control over the executive director is not a good sign.
I tire of it–the goodwill grandstanding that thinly veils the disrespect Libby has for the neighborhoods she ruins (but does not live in), for the laws we all have to abide by (except for her), the families of hard-working mid to lower class people who are afraid of what surrounds them (crazy guy living in shed, domestic violence partner fighting with spouse in street). As for the 29th street Coalition, isn’t it funded by Weed and Seed? I’m sure there are violations of the “slumlord” law it’s meant to enforce and it looks the other way when it comes to GT.
If Mz. Drew’s comments are true, I’d say we don’t need organizations like this. I also think the reason the GT doesn’t accept gov’t money is they would force the organization to abide by regulations. They would also be scrutinized as to their fund-raising practices.
As far as the comment about giving them ashtrays, that’s ridiculous. So, if they piss on your car, do you build them an outhouse?
The information that Libby Wright uses for the promotion of her organization is completely FALSE. I am a former employee who left as part of a mass exodus with half a dozen other employees within the same week over a year ago because it came to our attention that Libby had duped the Tucson public into donating monetarily to several Giving Tree programs that were not even in existence.
As I type this, Libby is struggling to stay afloat because there are governmental officials and neighborhood associations that have discovered and are making public some of Libby’s false claims that have brought in hundreds of thousands of dollars over the years in public and private donations, most of which have been made by the very generous people of Tucson and church congregations. She is now facing the closure of one of her shelters based on the discovery that the building is being used as a shelter and not a “church” as she has claimed. This case is being heard in the Pima County Superior Court later this week.
It is a well known fact that in addition to her overwhelming donations from the public, she also can find it in her conscience to charge the homeless individual families she “serves” $8.50 per person, per night, for shelter and a shower and the failure or inability to pay will quickly get a homeless individual and their family (including children) thrown out on the streets.
During my employment, I saw many, many examples of outright dishonesty and deception that played on public sympathy to gain donations from individuals and church congregations. I watched as thousands of dollars flowed through Libby’s hands each day during the holidays. I watched as bicycles were donated for the homeless children, none of whom received a single bike because they were all sold at auction. Same with donated cars, trucks, etc. There were countless reports of drug dealing in the bathroom from the residents of the Compassion Hope Center taking place right in front of the children and some of the mothers regularly requested to be moved to another shelter location for that reason. The Compassion Hope Center is NO CHURCH. The “sermons” that take place are given by anyone who cares to step up to the microphone.
This is NOT a “Christian” organization as has been stated by Libby repeatedly. There is nothing Christian about Libby Wright. Those of us who know the unethical inner workings of her operation and the many ways Tucson has been deceived by her know that The Giving Tree organization is just a money-making deception. This individual is nothing short of a criminal and should be locked up.
It seems to me that the comments posted here are made by a person who has a very personal grudge against the Giving Tree or Libby Wright. I volunteered for the feeding program with my church and I helped feed at least a 200 people that day. It was a very humbling experience to see what other people are going through. The Giving Tree may have to change what it does at it’s center in order to continue helping the homeless but they do help a lot of people who would otherwise may not find help when they need it the most.
A couple of years ago I was visiting my home town in Labrador, Canada, where I was born and raised, I am native Labadorian, Canadian, eh. (Sorry Lib,you have to be born and bred there to be called a native). What other country did you say you were from? I ran into Libby and her family who were visiting my little home town. Libby’s dad was in the military and was stationed there from the 60’s to very early 70’s. Yup, she was a military brat.
During our brief visit she shared with me a video of the Giving Tree Outreach Program, I was impressed with it, my friend was doing something to make a difference in other people’s lives. I wished her well and off we went in separate directions.
Yes I have to agree, I have worked with the Giving Tree for at least 6 years and know every story there is to know; and some people refuse to change to better themselves; so they create stories like the ones above and try to destroy the one thing that could have possibally changed who and what they lived for in the past and present, drugs, abuse, and other situations. The Giving Tree trys to give new focus through strong rendering and expentations. They offer services to thousands of people a month.
They are always willing to help, even if it meens breaking the rules at times, but sometimes breaking the rules is better then letting families freeze on the streets, I can remember several nights recieving call from the Salvation Army asking if we could stick one on the floor, or take a family that just arrived from Texas. Or even CPS for a young adult who was transitioning out of foster care; My question is, if it wasn’t for the generosuity of these people where would these people have gone.
I have witnessed first hand people dieing from the cold, burning there cloths to try and stay warm, then there blankets. I have seen children sleeping in shacks and under bushes like animals, having there parents die in the middle of the night and having to be raised by other homeless friends, going to camps where the children only had one set of cloths and no water to take a bath. Children sleeping on the streets and being hurt at night due to homelessness. And to think that people who have no F ING clue what we have done to help, how can you say anything, you just can’t speek. The Giving Tree has gone out of its way to support these people, yes maybe we took a toy from a child who had 20 and gave one to another who had none but never did we take for ourselves. And this was only with the child’s permission. People we have liars and we have those who choose to suceed. And The Giving Tree is not among the liars, every dollar given has gone to the community one way or another. People can’t even begin to understand just how much a organization spends on trying to help thousands of people a month. Its not just about the one who desided she didn’t want to work in the program and due her part and make something of her life, she chose the easy way out and crated a group of liars to make them seem injured by the people who took her in, in the first place gave her child christmas and a place to live, but she didn’t want to due anything but lay round all day and watch tv. Like so many others, who want there pipe and someone to pay there way. Sorry Libby and The Giving Tree are focused on the ones who want to help themselves, not the drunk and drug adicts that don’t want help. I can remeber going o Nogalas with Libby and some others including Robert Parks and handing out thousands of items to the homeless living in the dump, I’m sure no one talked to much about these events due to public harassment, but I seen lives changed kids recieving a bar of soap; acting like they had been given $50.00 and meet serveral orphans who’s parents died due to living outside homeless.
So people think about it, if you don’t know the whole story then don’t try to make one.
If your not doing, then shut the hell up.
If you thing the Giving Tree is a corupt organization then you need to volunteer there.
I have 10,000 plus photos of us doing, you’ll have what? Lies and deception in your hearts.
I hope the Giving Tree survives these attacks, for our communitys sake.
LIAR LIAR PANTS ON Fire! GreenlaND is not in Canada! You were not born there. You are not LabradorIan leave alone Canadian. Lie all you want but leave my homeland out of your lies. Ya bloody yank.