Kaia Sand Profile picture
Sep 23, 2020 17 tweets 6 min read Read on X
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.
The scale of homelessness is much larger than what the eye can see. This important metro-wide study estimated that 38,000 people were unhoused in 2017, and many people on the brink. It’s just going to get harder. @DrMarisaZapata1
@homelessnesspdx streetroots.org/news/2019/08/2…
More people will be homeless because of the fires and other climate related disasters @KatMcKelvey
streetroots.org/news/2020/09/2…
More people will be homeless when rent comes due after eviction moratoria are lifted. Lots of folks are struggling.
While shelters are one important way to support people who are struggling, shelters are not a good public health response to COVID-19.
jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/…
Motel rooms and safe camping for RVs are both better public health responses to COVID-19, allowing people to physically distance and have some autonomy.
One survey of people living on Portland streets showed their preferred COVID responses were motels, camps, & RVs. A few factors to consider: this survey was early in the pandemic, not when winter was approaching & this survey was about people’s top choice streetroots.org/news/2020/05/2…
But even so, it’s important that only 3 percent of unhoused people survey declared a shelter as their top choice from the stated options.
Also, many people who were surveyed were sleeping on the ground or in tents, not in RVs, so if more people surveyed possessed cars or RVs – as many unhoused people do – the results might have been different.
We saw with fire evacuations, that with political will, RVs camps can be supported. At Clackamas Town Center, there were showers, water trucks, cell-phone stations. Instead, people are parking their RVs in more desperate conditions. #OregonFires2020 ImageImageImageImage
And here’s the aspect of the Mayor's comments that activates my “spidey sense,” so to speak. Some people argue for shelters to get unhoused people out of sight. Sometimes this motivation is bald-faced, like how Donald Trump stated it last year: streetroots.org/news/2019/09/2…
But often this objective is more artfully veiled – and yet, still, the well-being of the poorest people in our society – their autonomy, their futures, their dreams, their health – is not prioritized.
Who are the mayor’s comments catering too? I don’t know. But I can smell enough danger to be alert – particularly since he connected them to this idea that the city is limited in how it is “remediating” (sweeping, that is) camps because of CDC guidelines.
But sweeping camps doesn’t get people into shelters or housing. It (1.) adds trauma; (2.) just moves people. They still exist. So either the Mayor’s comment on “remediation” – in connection to discussing shelters – was a non sequitur or … revelatory.
Poor people should never be used as pawns in power moves.

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More from @mkaiasand

Apr 23, 2022
🧵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

wweek.com/news/city/2022…
Read 10 tweets
Apr 21, 2022
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…
I'm grateful that @homelessnesspdx published this Village Guide based on 42 interviews with villagers. Recommended reading! 📖 pdx.edu/homelessness/e…
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.
Read 4 tweets
Mar 24, 2022
(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…
Read 7 tweets
Feb 17, 2022
🧵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*?
Read 12 tweets
Aug 3, 2021
(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.
Read 12 tweets
Sep 5, 2020
Thread | It is important for more of us to know what the C3PO camp villages in @pdx actually are — to counter the reckless lies launched in a video (I’m not going to give it any more oxygen by linking to it). I’ll do my best to lay out some of what I know:
These three camp villages were set up in April through a grassroots coalition working with the city of #pdx. As services receded like the tide in the pandemic, many unhoused people were left, standing on barren land — no libraries or day spaces & few services.
The camps addressed public health needs — the need to shelter in place, the need to access hygiene support such as sinks and toilets, the need to physically distance, the need to have safety from violence, and the need so many of us have for both autonomy and community.
Read 19 tweets

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