Reach and Restore to Lose Current Facility
The Hopkins nonprofit must be out of its space by March 31 after its landlord declined to renew its lease.
Reach and Restore got an unwanted Christmas present this year. The Hopkins nonprofit learned just before the holiday that its landlord would not be renewing its lease, said founder Ronda Oliver. The organization had a three-year, reduced-rate lease, but the tenant next door wants to expand into Reach and Restore’s space. Now the organization must be out of its current location by March 31. “It was kind of a shock when we found out,” Oliver told Patch on Wednesday. Oliver, a Minnetonka resident, started Reach and Restore in her garage after Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast. She initially just wanted to help those who'd been forced from their homes but soon found herself helping more and more of her fellow Minnesotans. In May 2010, …
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