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Hartford Cathedral Center opening new space for free health care, food pantry, ' a remarkable transformation’

Ed Stannard • October 3, 2022

Original Article: https://bit.ly/3M39jf3

The Malta House of Care, whose van has offered primary health care to residents of Hartford and East Hartford since 2006, will begin welcoming its clients to a new, renovated, state-of-the-art site on the campus of the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Hartford on Tuesday.

The Cathedral Community Center also will offer expanded space for the cathedral’s food pantry, which has already served more meals in 2022 than in all of 2021, according to Archbishop Leonard Blair.


Housed in a former church hall, the center has been “gutted, renovated and brought up to standard” to provide comprehensive primary care to the low-income population in the Asylum Hill neighborhood, said Vicki Veltri, executive director of Malta House, on Monday. Until now, Malta House has offered care primarily through its medical van, which serves patients at the cathedral as well as at two sites in Hartford and East Hartford, she said.


“This beautiful stationary site,” created at a cost $6.8 million, including $1.5 million from the Hartford Bishops’ Foundation, will enable Malta House to serve 2½ times more patients than it can with the van, and increase the opportunity to use the van to serve more people, Veltri said.


Blair said that since 2006, 70,000 free visits by uninsured clients have been served by Malta House. The new site is “just a remarkable transformation that’s been made possible through the generosity of many people,” he said.

“You need to try to get people where they are,” Veltri said. “People have limited ability for transportation. … So I think the location is going to serve the Asylum Hill neighborhood, which is the predominant neighborhood that we serve, very, very well. But it opens up the van to go to other places.”


The clinic “offers comprehensive primary care services and, I will say, longitudinal too, because we have patients that have stayed with us for a long time,” Veltri said. “Providers have been committed for a long time. So we operate with a small staff, but we also have the good fortune of having about 40 volunteers who also work with us to provide this care to our community.”

The volunteers include doctors, nurses, physician assistants and nurse practitioners, among others.


The Cathedral Community Center, which will house Malta House of Care and the cathedral food pantry, opens Sept. 20, 2022. (Aaron Joseph)

“It’s a tremendous group of people, very committed to helping people who cannot get coverage any other way,” Veltri said. “We’re looking at a population that cannot qualify for Medicaid or other coverage because either their status as immigrants or they don’t qualify for another reason for insurance coverage.”


Most patients are “very low income,” Veltri said, and represent about 30 languages and more than 50 countries of origin. There are Spanish and Portuguese translators on staff, “and I’m going to work on that as well, because we have a pretty large contingent of Portuguese-speaking patients” from Brazil and Portugal who make up a significant community in Hartford, she said.

Malta House also has been serving patients from Ghana at its East Hartford van stop on Mondays at St. Rose Roman Catholic Church, 33 Church St. The van also goes to St. Augustine’s Church, 10 Campfield Ave., Hartford, on Thursdays.


At other times, patients have been screened in the cathedral’s basement and then brought to the van for care.

Veltri said Malta House also had used a site on Woodland Street occasionally, “but it was smaller than our needs. We needed more space. And we needed to modernize it.”


The center has five exam rooms and private intake areas and is “much more, I think, amenable to our patients, who I think will see it as a beautiful site for them to come to for their health care,” Veltri said. Also, the new site “kind of frees us up a little bit to get some more neighborhoods with our van,” she said.



The center will also offer OB/GYN services, COVID-19 and flu clinics, behavioral health care and specialty days for dental, vision and cardiology care.


Malta House is run under the auspices of the Order of Malta, a lay Catholic order that offers care to the poor, Blair said. " I think we offer a unique service and we’ve been around for a long time and we want to continue doing it and this clinic just helps us expand it,” Veltri said.


The food pantry, run by members of the cathedral parish, also will be able to serve more of those in need, Blair said.


“In 2022 alone, over 11,000 people from the Greater Hartford area were served at the cathedral food pantry, and there are more families and individuals in the first eight months of 2022 than in all of 2021,” he said.

He said the pantry will be able to expand its hours and be able to offer blood pressure screenings, nutrition counseling and ease food delivery to the homebound.


“The food pantry also helps people moving from homelessness or shelters to apartments, including women coming from domestic abuse shelters, and men and women coming out of incarceration,” Blair said. “Those things also wind up coming under the sights of the food pantry. … And they also give non-food items like personal hygiene things, diapers, clothing, housewares.”


Blair said 41 tons of food have been received from Connecticut Foodshare over the years. “So having this greatly enhanced food pantry at the cathedral will be a tremendous boon to the charity and fellowship that we want to extend to the local community,” he said.

“I don’t think people are aware, even our Catholic people or the wider community, of just how much service is extended through the Cathedral of St. Joseph,” he said. “And this new facility, thanks to the generosity of many people, is going to make it even greater.”



Ed Stannard can be reached at estannard@courant.com

Editor’s note: The total cost of the Cathedral Community Center, $6.8 million, was misstated in the original story.


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On Mother’s Day, May 8, 2022, Archbishop Leonard Blair blessed the Mothers’ Garden and Donor Pavilion (also known as “In Honor of the Ones We Love”) plaques on the west lawn of the Cathedral of Saint Joseph. The plaques are inscribed with the names of mothers and other loved ones, as well as the names of the donors who honored or memorialized them. The plaques were installed last year as part of the Archdiocese’s Forward with Faith campaign under The Hartford Bishops’ Foundation (HBF). More than 60 guests attended the noon ceremony, held after the 11 a.m. Mass in the Cathedral, in which the Archbishop blessed the grounds and plaques with holy water after he prayed for the inscribed names. HBF General Chair James C. Smith, HBF Regional Chair John (Jamie) Kalamarides, and Bishop Juan Miguel Betancourt participated in the blessing. After the blessing, Dr. Ezequiel Menendez presented the Schola Cantorum, led by choirmaster Meredith Neumann. Guests were treated to refreshments, a flower for each mother, and a commemorative gift after the choir performed. HBF plans to host a Mothers’ Garden blessing in 2023 for the new names of loved ones shared with us by donors through our Forward with Faith campaign. For more information on this campaign, please email william.mclean@aohct.org. This fall, in September, HBF hosts two fundraising events, a golf classic on Sept. 27 and a wine festival on Sept. 25, to support the renovation of Cathedral Hall, a space on the lower level of the Cathedral of Saint Joseph, adjacent to the Mothers’ Garden. For more information on the Cathedral Hall project, please visit: hartfordbishopsfoundation.org/cathedral-hall. To register for the golf and/or wine events, please visit: hartfordbishopsfoundation.org/the-2022-ct-golf-classic or hartfordbishopsfoundation.org/wine-fest-2022 .
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