Thread: Mondays at @StreetRoots are intense. People struggle more than ever in Old Town. With humanity. With grace. First, I want to share with you this beautiful tent festooned with a wreath above its front door.
Services are shut down & changing (that’s why @StreetRoots launched a digital COVID-19 edition: rosecityresource.streetroots.org ... to try to keep up with the changes and communicate them)
Some organizations are working harder than ever. I walk down the street and see @blanchethouse overrun with need. @RoseHavenPDX is working so hard. There are many others. Please support them.
I describe it as feeling like we are running two organizations, not one, @StreetRoots. We are just doing so many things. It feels breathless.
Today people picked up their ballots to vote. They zoomed with @sselora to file for their stimulus money and low income tax credit. They told us they relapsed. They told us they recovered.
One man relapsed — and many unhoused people rallied around him, determined to watch over him until he can get back into treatment. A woman made the call to schedule that for him.
All of this is a happening among unhoused people.
Some people talked about being grateful for training in administering naloxone from the heroic Haven Wheelock @OutsideInPDX. Folks in recovery risk overdosing if they use — and without the usual supports, relapse is a risk.
A man who was in the life-threatening throes of addiction last time I saw him (I feared he would die) showed up today, just out of treatment. His face was smoother, his voice calm. He smiled. That promise is what’s at stake with voting yes on Measure 26-210.
A man had a seizure outside our door and hit the pavement hard. Other unhoused people took care of him while the ambulance arrived. They put on gloves to clean the blood to protect other people. People on the streets are on the frontlines of public health.
People on the streets deal with so many healh struggles. @MKushel shows how people age medically — a middle-aged person might need geriatric medicine. Put another way, if a housed person is more at-risk in this pandemic at 70, an unhoused person might at-risk at 45.
One @StreetRoots vendor reversed an overdose with naloxone last week — saved a life. Another tried to give CPR to a dying man in an adjacent he could not, ultimately, save. He carries that with him. The grief overtakes his face.
What do I want to communicate? That it’s harder than ever for unhoused people. This is why I hope you all will fight for unhoused people. Vote yes on Measure 26-210 news.streetroots.org/2020/05/01/sr-…
🧵The backlash is disheartening. 💔 As people emerge from devastations of the still-roiling pandemic (nearly a million deaths in the US, so many new heartbreaks), there’s too much backlash against the difficult, equitable work of a more just future.
Unhoused people are too often spoken about like a surplus population — as “other” rather than among. How can we rise to this moment in history with grace and grit? With a commitment to do the hard things, not the easy things?
It’s as if all the knowledge doesn’t exist in our community about the connection between arrests, incarceration, and further problems. When people call for *more* arrests of unhoused people, what exactly are they aiming for? @sophiegreenleaf
A tool can be transformed into a weapon. @StreetRoots helped found Dignity Village, championed Right 2 Dream Too, Hazelnut Grove, pushed for C3P0. But we are also watchful, too, lest "alternative shelters" are turned against people. streetroots.org/news/2022/04/1…
The @homelessnesspdx study points out key components: 1.) people have their own spaces to live; 2.) there's community; 3.) people have some role in governance/agency in what happens. These are good measures📏 to set next to plans you read about.
(Thread). There are vacant apartments around our city, but they are mostly inaccessible to people experiencing homelessness. We can change that. streetroots.org/news/2022/03/1…#3000Challenge
There are two buildings on SE Gladstone that include a juice bar, a hair salon, a bakery — and apartments where people who exited homelessness live. It’s called Jolene’s First Cousin. streetroots.org/news/2022/03/1…
When Kevin Cavenaugh dreamed up this project, he expected neighborhood pushback. Instead: “these are going to be our neighbors and we’ll likely know their names.” streetroots.org/news/2022/03/1…
🧵Okay. @SamAdamsPDX proposed mass shelters for 3000 people. Putting aside what's alarming (national guard, warehousing): he’s thinking big — but not big enough. Transform that into something positive: create/open up good livable spaces for 3000 people w/out criminalizing them.
How about we as a community take up the challenge of finding livable spaces for 3000 people more quickly than – but alongside –the slow build of affordable housing. A lot of housing, even deemed affordable, still is focused on middle incomes (that’s how unaffordable our city is)
How would we do it? Project Turkey on a statewide level turned 19 motels into livable spaces — shelters, transition housing, apartments) within about six months thanks to the able-steering of the @TheOregonCF. Could we have a *Portland Turnkey*?
(thread) This is why I write / this is why I fight:
More than an hour ago, I was biking home from @StreetRoots, southward on 3rd Avenue through downtown. I saw a man lying in the middle of the street.
He was sobbing. Blue hair, bright paint smudged on his face, a children’s rainbow-keyed toy piano next to him – he was a man covered in rainbow colors.
I am so extraordinarily fortunate to work at @StreetRoots because I work among many teachers: People impart lessons that I carry in my heart. One vendor told me that when his brain “itches” he needs someone to speak to him in a soothing voice – not with a badge and a gun.
Thread. I have two concerns I’d like to highlight regarding @tedwheeler's comments in this article by @EvertonBailey – (1.) public health during COVID-19; (2.) policy that might be motivated by concerns other than the wellbeing of unhoused people… oregonlive.com/portland/2020/…
First, though, in the context of the grievous inequity around housing, I'll start with the fact that housing must be a right.
Over the last several years, voters passed housing bonds at the city of Portland and @oregonmetro levels, as well as a Metro tax measure for services to support people in their housing that will kick into action next year. These are important steps.