Friday, June 27, 2008

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Director's Desk from Street Roots

Street Roots and Sisters Of The Road delivered more than 2,000 postcards to City Hall last week asking that the council suspend the camping and sit-lie ordinances.

It’s clear that Portlanders care about the civil rights of individuals experiencing homelessness. It’s unclear if Portland can develop any out-of-the-box methods as an alternative to the criminalization of people sleeping without shelter.

A supporter recently asked Street Roots why we continue to advocate for the abolishment of the camping and sidewalk laws when it’s clear City Hall is not moving on the issue.

Beyond being the No. 1 issue, short of housing itself, that our community has identified over the years, our response was that many of the laws that have unfairly stripped the rights of groups of individuals throughout our history have been met with blind resistance by bureaucracies for decades, sometimes centuries at a time. Often times those laws were perpetuated and kept in place due to public unrest driven by misconceptions, newspaper editorial boards and powerful economic and business interests that believed things like Jim Crow and anti-Okie laws were necessary to keep order and in the best interest of the general public.

Individuals living without homes in America are human beings and have every much of a right to exist in a community as anyone else, especially considering that law enforcement methods are costly and continue to contribute to a person’s criminal history, which is one of the biggest barriers in overcoming homelessness. It’s clear to that the camping and sidewalk laws target people on the streets, and until these laws are taken off the books we must continue the fight.

With your help, Street Roots met its spring goal of raising $20,000. We can’t thank you enough. Your support is going to empower vendors with the supplies and environment needed to be successful, while helping to publish a professional street paper that supports vendors and informs the community on a range of social justice issues.

We also received grants in May from Larson Legacy, the Catholic Campaign for Human Development, Autzen Foundation, Charis Fund, the McKenzie River Gathering and the Rose L. Tucker Foundation.

The funding from these great foundations is going to a range of different projects, including improving the Rose City Resources, organizing and giving vendors voice and to help fund specific pages in the newspaper. Big thanks to all of the foundations that support Street Roots. We look forward to working with all of our supporters over the next year to give voice, provide economic opportunities and deliver you a professional street newspaper.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Sisters Of The Road & Street Roots deliver postcards asking for the repeal of the camping and sit-lie lie ordinances

Activists deliver 2,000 signatures protesting city’s ‘abhorrent laws’
By Joanne Zuhl
Staff writer

Advocates for people on the streets filled City Council Chambers June 11, unfurling nearly 2,000 postcards signed by residents calling for the repeal of the city’s sit-lie and anti-camping ordinances. The campaign to repeal the laws was organized by Sisters of the Road and Street roots. Patrick Nolen, community organizer with Sisters, addressed the council, including new commissioner Nick Fish, and called for the city to end what he called "these abhorrent laws."

The so-called sit-lie law draws its name from barring people from sitting or lying on downtown sidewalks between the hours of 7 a.m. and 9 p.m. The camping ordinance prohibits people from sleeping outdoors on public property.
"Between these two laws, sit-lie and anti-camping, it is effectively illegal to be homeless in Portland’s downtown core," Nolen told the council. "The sit-lie law has been in effect since August 2007: Not once has a person who was not homeless been cited. Not once."



Nolen said the city’s own leadership admits that the city lacks enough low-income housing units and shelter beds to house everyone who is homeless in Portland, but persists in punishing people for "meeting basic needs: sleep and rest."
Sisters of the Road recently withdrew it’s membership from the Street Access for Everyone, or SAFE oversight committee, citing the continued enforcement of the sit-lie law, which the original SAFE committee recommended. The committee was established to address street disorders, such as aggressive panhandling, public intoxication and low-level crimes. In the process it re-instated a sit-lie ban, with the promise of establishing a day access center for people on the streets, and installing benches and bathrooms. Nolen, along with Sisters Associate Director Michael Buonocore resigned from the committee in May, saying the city has failed to deliver on those promises, while continuing to enforce the sit-lie law, which they say, targets homeless people. Buonocore said at the time that Sisters would like to have the committee vote to recommend a repeal of the law, but that there were not enough votes to support such a motion.

Soon after Sisters resignation, it partnered with Street Roots to launch the postcard campaign.



"These postcards come from all over, business owners, people living without housing, local politicians and citizens from every economic background,” Nolen said. “Each person that took the time to write is a murmur, a part of a louder voice, a louder voice demanding our rights."

Nolen said that similar laws are being challenged all along the West Coast.

"Each city, whether it is Fresno, Seattle, Los Angeles, the Bay Area, are all fighting to repeal laws that criminalize people for doing nothing more than trying to exist. Portland has a chance to be at the forefront of this march towards civil rights for all, because Portland belongs to all of us."
The Council made no comments on the presentation.

“We were amazed when doing outreach what a broad base of neighborhood activists, business owners and residents agreed with the idea that the sit-lie law and camping ordinance are human rights violations because they target a specific population in our society,” said Street Roots Director Israel Bayer.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Interview with the late, great Utah Phillips

Street Roots was sad to hear that the great folk singer and rebel rouser Utah Phillips died this past weekend. He passed away peacefully at his home in Nevada City, California on May 23. He was 73 years old.

Back in January of 2004 Israel Bayer of Street Roots had the chance to interview Utah Phillips before one of the many Winterfolk Benefit Concerts he headlined for Sisters Of The Road. Here's the interview titled, "The altered state of Utah Phillips."

He has been likened to Mark Twain and Will Rogers, but probably the best compliment you can give Utah Phillips is that, search high and low, you will find no better friend of the working man and woman.

And that’s a title that would do Phillips proud, because while he may not be the hardest workingman in show business, Phillips knows hard work like few others in show business. He is the radical son of labor organizers, a product of the union movement and a lyrical visionary for everyone who still holds hope for workers rights and civil liberties.

By the time Phillips was a teen-ager, he was riding the rails, bumming with tramps and soaking in every drop of life on the road. He taught himself to play the ukulele and guitar and began writing songs about the hobo life while he worked odd jobs. Those days and his constant keen observations of labor in the United States continue to fuel his musical storytelling today.

As a soldier in Korea, Phillips decided that nonviolence was the only sane way to live. He founded the Poor People’s Party in Utah, ran for the U.S. Senate on the Peace & Freedom ticket, and routinely runs as a presidential candidate on the Sloth & Indolence ticket.

Activist, musician, politician, rabble rouser and storyteller, Utah Phillips wears many hats. We caught up with him this month to talk about his life and music.

Street Roots: How did you get connected with Sisters of the Road?

Utah Phillips: I would come down and sing for Mike Barns and raise money for the (Portland) Alliance. Sister’s was providing the food for one of these events and I got curious about that. Around the same time, I got a phone call that Dorothy Day from the Catholic Workers had passed away. They rescued me from the streets, you know. I was feeling pretty depressed, so I went down to Sisters to get some lunch. At the time, Genny (Nelson) was working behind the counter there. There were very few people there. I sat and watched Genny. I watched the way she was working with the people and saw that the work Dorothy was doing was getting passed along. That was my first experience.

I was on the road a great deal at the time, and Genny lived in a variety of houses, and she would always have a place for me to stay. I have seen Sisters grow and grow and I watched Genny grow and grow. Genny is one of the most courageous people to be doing what she does with an ailing illness. Since I’ve had this diagnosed congestive heart failure, which means I can’t tour anymore, it’s hard to stay active. I think Genny is an example of people who can be very productive with an ailing illness.

Street Roots: What’s so unique about Sisters that has kept you coming back?

Utah Phillips: I guess first of all, the Catholic Workers philosophy that goes along with Sisters. That movement was started by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin spreading the social message of the Catholic Church that there is a whole other way of practicing Christianity that has nothing to do with fame and power and greed. Christians spend a lot of time examining the birth and death of Christ, you know, but very little practicing the example of his life. The Catholic Workers movement has meant to change this.

Dorothy went out on the skids up in New York City and opened houses of hospitality. Going back to the primitive church, Dorothy and Peter pushed the idea of people having Christ rooms where people who would be down and out on their luck could go. The Catholic Workers houses served meals to people and people would bed down if they had enough room for people to sleep. The houses are not missions and they don’t serve clients, everyone was a friend and a guest, that’s why at Sisters you have table service. You’re working with people and their lives and at Sisters they are guests.

Catholic Workers are pacifists. When I got back from Korea where I was a soldier, I acted out a lot with some pretty violent behavior. They taught me how to be a pacifist and it saved my life. They are also anarchists; they take nothing from the state and give nothing to the state. They live in volunteer poverty.

Again, I’m not a Christian, but the Catholic Workers are people I would go to the wall with.

See, Dorothy Day and other Catholic Workers, in the time of air raids, do you remember the air raids? I guess you wouldn’t. It was in the time of McCarthyism. It was against the law not to go to the air raid shelters. Shelter sirens would go off and when you heard the sirens you would have to go to the shelters. If you were on the streets you could be arrested. Well, Dorothy Day and her people would be down there in Times Square marching down the middle of the streets with hundreds of people when the sirens would go off, holding signs denouncing the nuclear buildup happening in the country. First it was hundreds of people marching, then thousands and finally the city said the hell with it. Direct action gets the goods.

See, life on the streets is very rough, you know. There are mean people out there who feel threatened and up against it all and act out violently, and at Sisters you can’t do that. Maybe it takes three or four visits at Sisters for someone to realize that ‘I don’t need this violence in my life, this is a peaceful place and I can put all that aside.’ Eventually, people like that become managers and activists and so on. General personalism works, you know. It may help out your trip that has been drilled into you by your bosses and drill instructors and peers, you know. You can walk away from it and lay it all down. This is what the Catholic Workers did for me and that’s what Sisters is doing for others.

Street Roots: It’s estimated that more than 500,000 veterans experience homeless—ness in this country every year. Do you think there is a connection between homelessness and the military?

Utah Phillips: I heard about the person who died on the streets up there shortly after I visited Santa Barbara. People on the beach there had put up crosses representing every soldier who had been killed in Iraq. I could see the connections between those soldiers and those who die on the streets. Those crosses represent sacrifice, you know, and there’s a world of difference between sacrificing your life and being sacrificed. Those people who die on the streets and on the battlefield died on the altar of human greed. One thing the rich benefiting off of these people being sacrificed, whether on the battlefield or on the streets or in a prison, have to understand is that the harvest of greed in the people is not wealth, but rage. I don’t want to see it all explode because I’m a pacifist, but the rich better have a care and better watch out. I hate to say that, I know there’s a better way, but the rich, year after year, are harvesting so much rage in the people in this country and all around the world.

Street Roots: How do you think being a hobo in the 21st century is different than the past?

Utah Phillips: (Laughter) A hobo is a wandering worker. At the end of the Civil War, when agriculture in the South had collapsed, workers traveled west, hoeing corn from one field to the next. They called themselves the hoe boys or, in vernacular,“hobos.” A hobo is somebody who works hard but doesn’t stay in the same place, you know. A tramp is different, a tramp is someone who doesn’t want to work for a boss or structure in their lives, like Frying Pan Jack said, a tramp is anyone who cooks out. If you gave him a ticket for the Salvation Army, he wouldn’t use it. A tramp will scavenge and wander and, of course, they say a bum is someone who drinks and wanders.

Used to be, there was always work for wandering people. In the past, you could be a wanderer and find work in a restaurant or on a loading dock or in a stable or on a farm or something. Now there are less ways for poor people to make it through the world, you know. There are fewer skid rows. Skid rows were great melting pots where all the people who had been driven ganged up where there was cheap food, tent cities and flophouses for people to go. Most of these melting pots have long since been torn out. Many times torn out without thought of where poor people were going to go. Where are people going to go?

Street Roots: Street newspapers are popping up all over the country. How important is it for people living in poverty to have their own independent media sources?

I think it’s important for everyone in the world to have an independent press. I think what you all got going on is a powerful, powerful movement. As a kid, I used to do that. You would get the newspapers, then you would sell them on the streets and then you would pay back and get a nickel for the paper.

At one time in Butte, Mont., the street vendors were getting paid less than the people who were delivering them, so they struck and created a newspaper union with the Wobblies (International Workers of the World). You guys have got it all figured out, you know, all figured out.

It’s going to have to come from the bottom up. If I take what’s going on in the media from the top down I get depressed. It’s from the world to the city to the block — we look at it from the top down when we watch CNN or Fox News. But if I walk out my door I see too many people working hard and doing good things to become a pessimist.

Street Roots: Over the years, how important is it for people living in poverty to have creative expression in their lives, like poetry, music and art?

Utah Phillips: All the great social movements within memory, starting with the labor movements and the civil rights movement, have all been singing movements. It’s terribly important to build solidarity. To take a comprehensive idea and then boil it down to a way people can understand it is very important.

It’s very important for poor people to have a place to have poetry workshops and halls for people to read in, or to have places for people to work with clay or create art and to have places to exhibit their art. It’s all desperately important for poor people to have ways to express themselves, you know.

Street Roots: What do you think of the current administration?

Utah Phillips: What kind of language does your paper print?

Street Roots: Well, we don’t censor anything.

Utah Phillips: In that case, they’re a bunch of brain-dead assholes. What we are looking at is corporate fascism. These people at the top of the pyramid have no experience in democracy. They’ve spent their lives in anti-democratic organizations and they’re bringing that thinking to government. Fascism grew in Germany, when a lot of people stood around and didn’t do anything. People went out to clubs, cabarets, and movies instead of doing anything, and after the war was over, the young people would ask their grandparents, ‘Why didn’t you do anything?’ We are in the beginning, you know, and we have to do something now. I don’t want my grandkids coming to me and asking why didn’t you do anything.

Street Roots: What do you think as poor and working people we need to do about it?

Utah Phillips: The major thing that needs to happen is the rebuilding of the labor movement. At a grassroots level it has proven itself decade after decade. The labor movement, through rut hog bottom-up organizing, brought us the eight-hour workday, workman’s compensation, minimum wage, and mining and safety laws.

When I was a kid, I was born in a hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, that was built by the United Auto Workers Union. National health care wasn’t an issue, it was a bargaining issue, and getting a good contract meant building hospitals and entire villages. The unions had enormous power. That’s why it was so vigorously attacked. We need millions of workers to get back to the bargaining table at the point of production. We need to rebuild the whole thing as a direct action movement.

Millions of workers need to walk away from the political system and get back to organizing in the workplace.

The best way to rebuild at a local level is to rebuild our own lives. The best way to rebuild at a national level is to rebuild democracy were we live and work, between us and our workmates, between us and our children, between us and our lovers, because if we can’t build it there in our own lives, the biggest ballot box in the world won’t give it to us.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

The mice who roared. New Street Roots out tomorrow!

In many ways Street Roots has remained rather quiet on the protests in front of City Hall. While most newspapers, TV and radio stations in Portland covered the homeless protests – Street Roots stepped back – one because of our publication schedule, two, we have a small staff working with individuals on the streets throughout Portland.

Instead of trying to report every single detail, while missing the bigger picture, we relied on our experience, relationships, and knowledge of the homeless front and the politics surrounding the camp and homelessness in Portland.

Street Roots has two special editions every year, the first of which was the “Drug Issue” in early April. While the newspaper tomorrow is not a special edition, it might as well be. Since the protest began we’ve had three reporters on the scene, and at least five vendors sleeping out in front of City Hall.

The headline of the new Street Roots is entitled, “The mice who roared.” The newspaper includes a photo package, two in-depth news stories on the lives of the people protesting, the emotions involved and how exactly we came to this point, and what is being done behind the scenes. We’ve also included a detailed eight-year timeline of direct actions, protests, legal decisions, and policy surrounding the camping and sit-lie ordinances along with commentary from protesters and a cost analysis of shelters vs. permanent housing.

We also have an in-depth interview with John Verdi with the Electronic Privacy Information Center, and commentary on Fusion Centers. You may be surprised at just who is spying on you.

And of course, we have street art, poetry and two vendor profiles of individuals selling the newspaper. Pick up a copy tomorrow from a local neighborhood vendor. One-dollar goes a long way, and you get something great in return.

Here’s a peak into the newspaper’s take on what’s going down.

City needs back-up long term plan

Street Roots fully supports the idea of housing first – the idea that we as a community can engage individuals on the streets with low-income housing.

Portland is badly in need of leadership that will guide our city to the resources needed for people on the streets to thrive through a broad approach that includes economic development (micro-enterprising), outreach and engagement efforts through non-law enforcement and harm reduction models, and of course, housing itself.

The protesters in front of City Hall demanding an end to the camping and sit-lie ordinances have thrown a wrench into a larger bureaucratic battle that’s been playing out behind the scenes for years.

The city’s response to what many bureaucrats say are unreasonable demands (repealing the camping and sit-lie ordinances) have been to open 102 emergency shelter beds, 90 for men and 12 for women. The problem is that one of the goals of the 10-year plan to end homelessness was to get away from sheltering individuals and to providing permanent supportive housing first.

The reason for this is twofold: First, shelters are more expensive to run and don’t wield the results of the housing first model. Secondly, when shelters beds don’t fill up, the city can enforce the city’s camping ordinance. State law requires law enforcement not to enforce the ordinance if shelters are full.

Like it or not, many individuals experiencing homelessness are not going to sleep in a shelter, period. There are also people living with animals; couples, and families that simply will not be split up due to archaic shelter guidelines. And yes, there are drug addicts. Individuals dealing with an addiction are human beings, and using law enforcement to force individuals into the criminal justice system, and not have the same access to shelters as the broader population, is inhumane, costly, and backwards.

Street Roots has been covering camp sweeps, the camping ordinance and other criminalization efforts, along with innovative solutions to ending homelessness since our inception. On the ground level, we’ve consistently been told by our peers, vendors and other people on the streets that the number one issue beyond finding housing is law enforcement moving individuals from one place to another, time and again, with no alternative.

The people in front of City Hall have organized themselves. Their leadership is strictly from the streets. For better or worse, they’ve created community, and at the end of the day, tried to make the world a better place for themselves and people just like them.

We are all on the same side in this fight — local businesses, community organizations, City Hall, advocates, social services, and the people affected the most. It’s clear that there are not enough resources. But we can’t lose our focus on being able to couple short-term, out-of-the-box thinking with a housing first model that has proven successful. We can’t be distracted into thinking shelter beds are a satisfactory means to end the criminalization of the homeless or to house people. Portland’s leaders need to reinforce long-term solutions to truly make a difference.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Homeless rise up on the streets to fight anti-camping and sit-lie ordinance


Individuals experiencing homelessness and activists have been camping on City Hall for nearly three-weeks. The group is calling itself the Homeless Liberation Front.
  • Portland Homeless Liberation Front


  • The group has ranged from 10 to 70 individuals who have been sleeping on the sidewalk in front of City Hall demanding an end to the anti-camping and sit-lie ordinances. The camping ordinance is used to clear camps out throughout Portland, while the sit-lie ordinance criminalizes sitting or lying on a public sidewalk from 7AM to 7PM.

    In late April, a group of individuals were swept from under the Burnside and Morrison bridges in downtown Portland. The group marched to City Hall in the dead on night in defiance of the ordinances.

    On Monday, May 5, four individuals from the camp met personally with the Mayor. Protestors demanded an end to the ordinances. The mayor declined. No resolution was reached.

    The city has opened more than 100 emergency shelter beds until June in response to the protestors. Both individuals on the streets and homeless advocates say that's not enough.

    On Saturday, May 10, seven individuals were arrested – six for interfering with a police officer and one for resisting arrest.

    Patrick Nolan, community organizer with Sisters Of The Road caught the arrests on film.



    Shortly after the arrests an illegal camping notice was posted in front of City Hall, giving protesters until Tuesday, May 13, to clear the area or risk arrest.

    On Sunday, May 11, the group formally signed a letter asking the Mayor to meet again this week.

    More to come.

    Note: Street Roots has been following the protests and is working on an in-depth news story for the Friday, May 16, edition. The newspaper also came out against the camping ordinance on May 5, asking City Hall to “suspend the camping ordinance in designated regions of the City of Portland until all nine-action steps have been implemented, and the 10-year plan to end homelessness is complete. 

Street Roots believes it is cruel and unusual punishment to continue to criminalize individuals experiencing homelessness from sleeping on public property when the City of Portland can’t offer any real, concrete solutions to the crisis until a projected 2015.”

    Posted by Israel Bayer

    Photo by Kristina Wright

    Wednesday, May 7, 2008

    Thinking Outside the Cardboard Box

    Join Dignity Village and Kwamba Productions along with Street Roots and Sisters Of The Road tomorrow for a night of theater, film, art and education.

    At the event, Kwamba and Dignity Village will screen a portion of the Tent Cities Toolkit interactive movie in which Dignity Villagers, Portland¹s former commissioner EriK Sten, Street Roots Israel Bayer, JOIN’s Marc Jolin, and many others are featured.

    Portland's street newspaper Streets Roots, Sisters of the Road, among others, will open the event with exhibits from local street artists and photographers. The event will also premiere the 15-minute play "Road to Dignity," written and performed by Dignity Villagers, and directed by Deborah Rodney and Phyllis Jones.

    The play is a lighthearted sketch of a typical day at Dignity Village, narrated by Gizmo, one of the Village cats. The play breaks stereotypes of why people are homeless. It gets down to the real nitty-gritty of who we are as people, neighbors, and as members in the community.

    The event will close with an open-mic hour of music and poetry from the audience and broader community. If you would like to participate in the open-mic, please bring your instrument (mics are provided) and join the fun!

    When: Thursday, May 8, from 6:30 ­ 9:00 PM (Doors open at 6PM)
    Where: Hollywood Theatre (4122 SE Sandy Blvd, Portland)

    Admission is free at the door!


    Thinking Outside the Cardboard Box is sponsored in part by Regional Arts and Culture Council and will premiere local art, photography, a theatrical play, and a film.

    This is a collaborative project between Dignity Village (www.dignityvillage.org) and Kwamba Productions (www.kwamba.com), who are long-time partners in producing outreach materials for ending homelessness through alternative housing communities.

    Tuesday, May 6, 2008

    All hell breaks loose on the homeless front

    The new Street Roots is on the beat. This issue explores the new documentary film being put together on the life of James P. Chasse Jr., we report on tighter identification requirements, and offer Q & A's with the outgoing homelessness program manager Heather Lyons and council candidate Nick Fish.

    Lots of things happening on the homeless front. The latest editorial from Street Roots outlines it all right here.

    It seems that in the few weeks since Erik Sten, the former housing commissioner, left City Hall, all hell has broken loose on the homelessness and affordable housing front. From the elections to the city budget to talk of a possible merger of the city and county’s housing agencies to backdoor dealings and the implosion of the state’s largest mental health provider (Cascadia) — the phones at Street Roots have been ringing off the hook.

    While Street Roots will be covering many of these issues in future editions, it’s clear that with no coherent leadership at City Hall on the issue, a myriad of players and institutions, for better or worse, are making power plays that will ultimately guide us into uncharted waters.

    Less than a week after Sten left the building, funding for the 10-year plan to end homelessness had been cut, and the city’s popular Homeless Connect, a program that offers homeless clients one-stop support services four times a year, was completely zeroed out in next year’s budget.

    The machinations run deeper: A report is in the works to determine if the Bureau of Housing and Community Development (the city agency responsible for the 10-year plan to end homelessness and housing and economic development programs), Multnomah County’s homeless programs and the Housing Authority of Portland (which works to provide affordable housing) would be better suited merged under one roof. The reasoning behind this would be the consolidation of housing dollars. Problem is, from our vantage point, it wouldn’t create any new funds, it would just rearrange the chairs on the deck and create one large bureaucracy that would be harder to manage.

    Then there’s the Portland Development Commission’s recent move to hand over its multi-million dollar housing programs to another agency — most likely to the Housing Authority of Portland. Advocates, and many City Hall insiders, are scrambling to figure out exactly what it all means. What’s at stake? Possibly the PDC’s 0-30 percent set aside that goes to low-income people that took advocates and City Hall years to develop.

    We haven’t even mentioned the 30 individuals experiencing homelessness that are camped out in front of City Hall demanding a safe place to sleep from police harassment or that the sit-lie ordinance is only targeting homeless people, or that we still haven’t seen the Mayor’s office move on oversight for private police.

    What we are getting at is that whoever takes over housing and homelessness issues at City Hall, and programs at the county, had better be prepared to hit the ground running.

    Over the past few years housing leaders were able to weave large systems, grassroots advocacy, law enforcement and non-profits together in a way that gave each group, including the homeless themselves, space to do good work and to be heard. We can see dark clouds on the horizon, and it’s going to take real leadership to make sure the fleet that Sten and others assembled isn’t led astray and we find ourselves lost at sea.

    Monday, May 5, 2008

    Street Roots letter to Mayor and Commissioners

    May 5, 2008

    Dear Mayor and City Commissioners,

    The Bureau of Housing and Community Development has widely reported a massive reduction in people experiencing homelessness since the inception of the 10-year plan to end homelessness in December of 2004.

    The 10-year plan to end homelessness in Portland and Multnomah County outlines nine action steps that will eliminate homelessness in our city by 2015. Those steps include:

    - Move people into housing
    - Stop discharging people into homelessness
    - Improve outreach to homeless people
    - Emphasize permanent solutions
    - Increase supply of permanent supportive housing
    - Create innovative new partnerships to end homelessness
    - Make the rent assistance system more effective
    - Increase economic opportunity for homeless people
    - Implement new data collection technology throughout the homeless system

    We ask that City Hall suspend the camping ordinance in designated regions of the City of Portland until all nine-action steps have been implemented, and the 10-year plan to end homelessness is complete.

    Street Roots believes it is cruel and unusual punishment to continue to criminalize individuals experiencing homelessness from sleeping on public property when the City of Portland can’t offer any real, concrete solutions to the crisis until a projected 2015.

    We recognize the difficulties law enforcement encounter due to circumstances beyond their control - individuals sleeping in regions of the city that include up and coming festivals, markets, etc.

    But without offering any research, or fact-based data that sweeping individuals from one location to another without offering real time solutions help individuals end their homelessness – the city is essentially moving away from the core philosophies of the 10-year plan to end homelessness.

    Denying individuals the right to sleep and constantly asking individuals to move from public sidewalks and public parks elevates the level of anxiety, stress, sleep deprivation and ultimately trauma to peoples lives forced to sleep outdoors.

    Continued enforcement of the cities camping ordinance creates an atmosphere of distrust with outreach workers, non-profits, law enforcement and individuals on the streets – ultimately working against the idea of engaging individuals on the streets to work towards permanent housing and housing first.

    Thank you for your consideration.

    Sincerely,

    Israel Bayer
    Street Roots
    211 NW Davis
    Portland, Oregon 97209
    503-228-5657
    streetroots@hotmail.com
    www.streetroots.org

    Thursday, May 1, 2008

    Civic Action Group and Mayoral forum round out May Day!

    What: Housing Opportunity Mayoral Forum

    A broad base of community organizations will be asking candidates questions about homelessness and affordable housing. Sponsored by Community Development Network, Affordable Housing NOW!, JOIN, Street Roots, Community Alliance of Tenants, Sisters, 211, and Coalition for Homeless Families.

    When: 12pm-1:30pm Thursday May 1st, 2008

    Where: First Unitarian Church (1011 SW 12th Ave).

    After the forum head on down to the South Park Blocks and join Sisters Of The Roads Civic Action Group (CAG). The group will hold a Flag Action to dramatize the number of people without housing in Portland. Held in conjunction with the annual May Day march, flags will be posted in a field to represent the 1,438 people that the City of Portland says are sleeping outside each night. Sisters believes that number to be higher.

    When: 12pm-5pm  Come by anytime between then to see the flags and then join the May Day march that starts at 5pm. After we march with the May Day March, there will be an after party at the Unitarian Church where CAG members will be tabling.

    Where: South Park Blocks between Ninth and Park and between cross streets Main and Salmon (the starting point of the May Day march).

    Wednesday, April 30, 2008

    Candidate calls for reduction in homeless sweeps, commitment to more housing

    A press release from Jim Middaugh's campaign. Look for more coverage of the homeless protests in the up and coming Street Roots.

    PORTLAND – City Council candidate Jim Middaugh today called on Portland leaders to consider changes in the enforcement of the city’s anti-camping ordinance until the City Council and other leaders in affordable housing identify or build 1,000 new housing units to get people off the streets.

    Protesters are sleeping outside of City Hall in response to police sweeps of camping sites and the lack of affordable housing. The city currently is considering more studies and short-term extensions on homeless shelter operations in response. “Studies and short term shelters may be important, but they are nothing more than Band Aids. We don’t need mats on the floor, we need keys in the door,” Middaugh said. “We need bold leadership to revamp our local housing programs to ensure they prioritize investments in those most in need. Until housing is available we may need to rethink enforcement of our anti-camping ordinance,” he said.

    Based on a legal challenge, Los Angeles agreed in 2007 to reduce homeless sweeps until the city and its partners built 1,250 units of new housing. “Sweeps in other cities have been challenged in court. It’s only a matter of time before they are challenged in Portland. Providing more housing is the best way to get people off the street and to avoid costly litigation,” Middaugh said.

    Middaugh called on the Portland Development Commission, the Bureau of Housing and Community Development, Multnomah County, the Housing Authority of Portland and the development and homeless provider community to find or create 1,000 new units of housing for the homeless during the next five years.

    “City Hall should state unequivocally that it will work with its partners to find or create 1,000 new units of housing by committing the PDC’s TIF set-aside, public housing money and new housing money to a reorganized housing system focused on getting people off the streets,” Middaugh said. “Until there is an adequate number of homes for people who currently are forced to camp – including in front of City Hall – there will continue to be a problem. Any proposed reorganization of housing programs should focus first and foremost on getting people off the street,” he said.

    The PDC, HAP and others recently have called for a consolidation of housing programs. The City’s Bureau of Housing and Community Development is working now to develop alternative ways to organize the region’s housing providers. “Any reorganization should not dilute our successful efforts to implement the 10 Year Plan to End Homelessness,” Middaugh said.

    “Mayor Potter’s response to the protest is insufficient. We don’t need to study the Section 8 Voucher problem we need to act on it. We need more outreach workers to help the people with vouchers find apartments and to give landlords someone to call when they need help dealing with difficult situations,” Middaugh said. “More importantly, the Council needs to set some very clear and bold affordable housing goals and to commit to meeting them. We need to respond directly to the needs of the people sleeping outside City Hall by focusing on finding or creating more housing,” Middaugh said.

    “We need a bold plan if we are to continue to make progress they way we did under Commissioner Erik Sten. If our response is simply to lay more mats on shelter floors and to ‘explore’ use of vouchers, we won’t address the fundamental needs facing our community,” Middaugh said. “It’s unfair to use our police to move people along when they have no place to go. We need action,” he said.

    Don't miss the housing opportunity mayoral forum tomorrow!



    Join us tomorrow May 1, for the Housing Opportunity Mayoral Forum. A broad base of community organizations will be asking candidates questions about homelessness and affordable housing.

    The forum will take place at the First Unitarian Church, 1011 SW 12th Ave., Portland, Ore. 97205, from noon-1:30PM

    See you there!

    Tuesday, April 22, 2008

    Help support Street Roots today!

    For the past 10 years, Street Roots has been vital in changing the lives of readers and people experiencing homelessness. Together, we have helped change the political landscape of poverty and human rights in our community. Stereotypes have been broken. Dreams have come true. Lives have been changed.

    We simply can’t exist without your support. Donations from community members like you are the driving force behind the
    operations of Street Roots. Your donation will go directly to support the vendor program and operations of the newspaper.

    Please consider a donation to Street Roots this spring, and join us in our mission to assist people experiencing homelessness and poverty by creating flexible income opportunities. Through education, advocacy and personal expression, we are a catalyst for individual and social change.

    No matter how big or small, your support of Street Roots matters!

    Thank you for your consideration,

    Israel Bayer
    Director
    Street Roots

    You can mail donations to: Street Roots, 211 NW Davis St. Portland, OR 97209
    or donate securely on line at
  • On-line donations


  • Street Roots is a 501 (c) 3 organization and your donation may be tax deductible.

    What others have to say:

    "Street Roots tells stories that other media outlets don't. It's what anyone who cares about the realities of being poor in Portland should be reading."
    – Nick Budnick
    Portland Tribune

    "Selling Street Roots means that I can take care of myself,"
    – Millard GulledGe, who sells Street Roots in the Concordia Neighborhood

    Monday, April 21, 2008

    Street Roots interviews Narco News founder Alberto Giordano

    This week Managing Editor Joanne Zuhl interviews Narco News founder Alberto Giordano. Giordano covers the war on drugs from his vantage in Latin America.

    Giordano is an award-winning newspaper reporter, radio and television host, and Internet journalism pioneer who founded the Internet newspaper Narco News in 2000 and its School of Authentic Journalism in 2002. Prior to moving to Latin America, Giordano was the political reporter for the Boston Phoenix, and he has published his work in The Washington Post, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Nation, The Utne Reader, American Journalism Review, New Left Review, and other publications. In 2004, Giordano received the Upton Sinclair Freedom of Expression Award.

    Narco News draws together a network of journalists as co-publishers, including, at one time, the late Gary Webb. The School of Authentic Journalism, in Mexico and Bolivia, has trained more than 100 journalists to be investigative reporters on civil rights and the impact of U.S. drug policy on Latin America.

    In 2001, Giordano received First Amendment protections in a landmark New York Supreme Court case — Banamex vs. Mario Menendez, Al Giordano and Narco News — setting a precedent for all online journalists and Web sites. His criticism of the war on drugs, and its impact on Latin America are featured regularly at narconews.com.

    To read the interview head on over to Street Roots.
  • Giordano interview


  • posted by Israel Bayer

    Housing Opportunity Mayoral Forum - May 1

    Join Street Roots along with other community organizations for a forum with Portland’s mayoral candidates. A broad base of community organizations will be asking candidates questions about homelessness and affordable housing.

    The forum will take place Thursday May 1, from noon to 1:30PM at the First Unitarian Church (1011 SW 12th Avenue).

    Thursday, April 17, 2008

    Special drug issue on the streets tomorrow


    Street Roots first special edition of 2008 - the Drug Issue is out tomorrow.

    The newspaper is jam packed with articles and commentaries, including a look at Oregon’s incarceration rate for drug related offenses and Portland’s myriad of recovery and harm reduction programs.

    The paper has a fascinating interview with Judge Christopher Marshall with the Multnomah County’s drug treatment court, and we talk with Narco News founder Alberto Giordano.

    We bring you an in-depth look at Portland’s controversial Service Coordination Team and how it relates to Project 57 and a neighborhood list made up of “chronic offenders.”

    Portland author Martha Gies walks us through Gary Webb’s long shadow of reporting about the drug trade in Latin America and how it eventually led to the investigative reporters death.

    We talk to Portland’s Drug and Vice squad, hear from law enforcement officers against prohibition, and highlight poetry from addicts on the streets.

    All of this and much more in the special edition hitting the streets tomorrow.

    Buy a copy from a neighborhood vendor today!

    Thursday, April 3, 2008

    Erik Sten, Jim Middaugh and oh so much more in the new Street Roots

    The new Street Roots will be out tomorrow. Managing Editor Joanne Zuhl spends an afternoon with Erik Sten. Dubbed the “street fighter” back in 2003, Erik walks us through the peaks and valleys of life at City Hall and just how he came to get such a nickname.

    A new mental health coalition called MindFreedom Oregon is organizing individuals statewide, and they aren’t playing around. The new coalition based in Eugene is made up of mental health consumers and psychiatric survivors who want radical change in the services provided to individuals working with and dealing with mental illness.

    That’s just the tip of the iceberg. We profile formerly homeless mayoral candidate Steven Entwisle and interview council candidate Jim Middaugh. Middaugh who is running a tight race with well-respected Nick Fish throws down on private police. He also talks affordable housing, public safety and Portland's future.

    Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) head has been forced out. Go figure huh? Street Roots editorial and Soup Can both weigh in on Alphonso’s departure.

    We connect with Tara Herivel, a Portland defense attorney and editor of the new book Private Profiteers: Who makes money from mass incarceration, and head on down to St. Augustine with the great Jay Thiemeyer.

    Did we mention the art, poetry and beautiful rants from the streets? You won’t be disappointed. Get your Street Roots from your local neighborhood vendor!

    Thursday, March 27, 2008

    We're not betting on it

    From this weeks Directors Desk

    The sit-lie ordinance continues to be a controversy. Seventy-nine of the 88 warnings and tickets issued under the ordinance have gone to people experiencing homelessness. According to police reports, 69 of those were either homeless or transient and 10 had no address listed at all. In fact, one individual was cited at the very location he gave police as his
    address — the Portland Rescue Mission.

    We assume that the number of verbal warnings given are in the hundreds and have no reason to believe that the majority aren’t against people sleeping out.

    Many of the individuals who have received written warnings and tickets are what some call "frequent flyers." They are individuals who tend to rack up multiple “quality-of-life” offenses. Some for drugs and booze, others for
    things like sleeping in a park or trespassing in front of a business, depends.

    The business community and law enforcement have long argued that the sit-lie law is a tool to deal with Portland’s frequent flyers - mostly panhandlers, and individuals that clearly aren’t with the program. It also serves as a tool to target people sleeping on our sidewalks.

    Because panhandling is a freedom of speech issue, and the camping ordinance can’t be enforced without a 24-hour notice to vacate, the sit-lie serves as a key component to move people from our public sidewalks.

    It's been clearly documented by city officials that nearly 1,600 individuals are homeless after shelter beds are full. We’ve said it until we are blue in the face. That means, like it or not, that 1,600 individuals will be sleeping in our doorways, parking lots, parks, neighborhoods, and on park benches tonight.

    I don’t know what else we can say. Should we call for a suspension of the ordinance? Should we respectfully decline to say anything at all? Street Roots has stood up time and again to oppose this ordinance. We’ve stood up even when it meant being accused by some of punking out after working with the Safe Access For Everyone committee (the same committee the ordinance came from) to help produce the Rose City Resource Guide.

    We believe in all of the services being worked on through the SAFE committee – more park benches, public restrooms, and a day access center. How could anyone not be in support of these services that will not only help people on the skids but our community at large? We had hoped we were wrong about the ordinance. Maybe we will still be proven wrong, but looking at the way things are now, we’re not betting on it.

    posted by Israel Bayer

    Thursday, March 20, 2008

    Kids let themselves out of school, oh and take over City Hall is all

    Who says the young people don't care? Students from several high-schools and middle schools walked out today to protest the war in Iraq. Vendor Frank Cobb just happened to be walking to Sisters Of The Road for lunch after selling Street Roots at 23rd and Lovejoy when he encountered the protest.

    Here's some pics from Frank.



    Of course it wouldn't be a real student walk-out without taking over City Hall and all.





    Amy J. Ruiz has more on the young radicals over at blogtown
  • City Hall under siege!
  • Prowling through history with the Black Panther Party - new Street Roots

    The new Street Roots will hit the street tomorrow. The feature story sheds light on Portland's Black Panther history with co-founder Kent Ford. Street Roots has a chilling Q & A with abortion doctor Susan Wicklund from Portland and Affordable Housing Now's Julie Massa talks about the politics of affordable housing in Portland.

    A section 8 landlord argues that the problem with the lack of availability for low-income residents is a bigger problem than a tight market. A mother offers a letter to Portland's street community after her daughter was found dead at Laurelhurst Park, Jay Thiemeyer offers up his world-view of St. Augustine and Street Roots offers up its opinions on the latest results of Portland's ever controversial sit-lie law.

    Did we mention the great art and poetry from Portland's streets? All of this and much more in tomorrow's Street Roots.

    Support a vendor in your neighborhood and get a great read in return.

    Monday, March 17, 2008

    Seattle protests homeless sweeps on the doorsteps of City Hall

    Real Change in Seattle squats at City Hall to protest homeless sweeps.

  • Ten tents my ass


  • Tensions between advocates and officials in Seattle and San Francisco are red hot.

  • When bureaucrats attack
  • Thursday, March 6, 2008

    Street Roots video from Portland Trail Blazers and Hands on Greater Portland

    Street Roots was recently given the "volunteer innovation" award from the Portland Trail Blazers and Hands on Greater Portland.

    Here's the video they made for the awards presentation.

    Sectioned Out on the streets tomorrow

    A brand new Street Roots will be on the streets tomorrow. The feature article explores how Oregon law allows landlords to refuse Section 8 vouchers and how it contributes to hurting those who need housing most.

    We go train-hopping across Canada with Rodney Graham, talk politics and affordable housing with Ed Garren and break down just exactly how much Portland taxpayers are spending on the war in Iraq. Did you know we could have built 26,000 affordable housing units, and built several schools in Oregon alone? That's not counting hiring scores of music and art teachers or fixing our roadways.

    Check out all of this and much more in Street Roots tomorrow. Support a vendor and get a great read!

    Monday, March 3, 2008

    Feds bring idea of housing first to New Orleans, but offer no assistance

    The Associate Press reports that the Bush Administration's "homeless czar" spent Monday morning in a tent city of displaced people and the afternoon in the offices of Mayor Ray Nagin, offering new ideas to help a growing homeless population but promising no immediate increase in federal funding.

    Philip Mangano, executive director of the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, began his first visit to post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans by touring a stretch of avenue where about 150 homeless people have been living in camping tents for months on end. Later, Mangano met with Nagin and members of the city council to discuss the mayor's plan to transfer the colony to a military-style barrack where they would be provided bunk beds, meals and care.

    Read more
  • Feds offer no help
  • Sunday, March 2, 2008

    Security guards in Seattle take to the streets

    In a bid to get a first-ever union contract with their employers, about 200 security guards staged a rush-hour street blockade Feb. 25 at Fifth Avenue and Columbia Street in which Seattle police arrested two participants.

    Read more
  • Seattle rent-a-cops unionizing
  • House of Cards

    House of Cards - The subprime market collapse stands to disproportionately affect low-income and minority borrowers
    By Mara Grunbaum, Street Roots Staff writer

    The sweeping effects of the national mortgage crisis are beginning to catch up to Oregon homeowners, and in the ensuing storm of foreclosures and financial ruin, low-income minority families may stand to lose the most.

    Black and Hispanic Oregonians at all income levels were more likely than whites to have received subprime loans in 2006, according to a study released in January by the Oregon Center for Public Policy, an economic research group.

    The subprime mortgage industry — the business of lending money to people with “subprime,” or less than ideal, credit — can help those who don’t qualify for traditional mortgages become homeowners by offering small or nonexistent down payments, interest rates that start low and increase after several years, or minimal requirements for documenting income. But subprime loans are also far likelier than traditional mortgages to end in foreclosure.

    Consumer advocates contend that many homeowners have been pushed into subprime mortgages they can’t afford or persuaded to refinance unecessarily by predatory mortgage brokers, who have financial incentives to sign people to expensive loans. In many cases, recipients of the high-risk loans actually qualified for better terms. “We have seen a common practice where someone with a prime rate credit score sits down with their broker and ends up being sold a high-interest subprime loan,” said Angela Martin, director of the Economic Fairness Coalition at the progressive advocacy group Our Oregon.

    According to RealtyTrac, a California foreclosure-tracking company, there were 1,099 foreclosure filings in Oregon in December 2007 — more than four times as many as in December 2006. The Center for Responsible Lending projects that 8,372 homes in Oregon ultimately will be lost to foreclosure on subprime loans made in 2005 and 2006.

    Read more
  • House of Cards


  • Read this and much more in the current issue of Street Roots. Support a vendor and get a great read today!

    Saturday, March 1, 2008

    Jeff Bissonnette talks housing and homelessness

    For the past nine years, Jeff Bissonnette has been a consumer advocate with the Citizens’ Utility Board of Oregon. He has also spent the past decade working a as a social service advocate to set up school breakfast programs and summer feeding programs for children.

    He is a candidate for City Commissioner seat No. 1, being vacated by Sam Adams.

    Street Roots: You talk about the need for the city’s education and technical training needs to keep up with the times, including post-high school education and lifelong training. How will you interface that with the low-income and homeless populations that are in particular need of workforce training opportunities?

    Jeff Bissonnette: Very low-income and homeless people need particular attention when looking at work force training opportunities. First, we need to ensure that there are adequate support systems in place to help individuals and families maintain basic needs: housing services, substance abuse treatment and mental health treatment if needed, assistance to pay energy bills, nutrition programs in schools and community organizations to make sure children are well-nourished (and these programs also help to stretch household resources), good before- and after-school programs to keep kids out of trouble.

    Second, we need to help individuals get a job that leads to a career and offers a future. I intend to advocate for a “green collar jobs program” modeled after a successful initiative in Oakland, California. The Ella Baker Center runs a “pathways from poverty” designed to get very low-income people started in jobs in the clean energy industry, such as making homes and commercial buildings more efficient, as well as installing and maintaining renewable energy systems. Education and on-the-job training are combined to make sure that people are supported in the first steps in an industry that is growing, providing living wage jobs. This effort will require the combined efforts of business, labor unions, community organizations and educational institutions to provide the opportunities for these new green collar workers.

    S.R.: What can you do for Portland that the other candidates running for this position cannot?

    J.B.: While every candidate in this race offers something to the people of Portland, I offer two things that others do not: 1) a long history of being the lead organizer of numerous diverse coalitions focused around common agendas and goals and 2) the ability, demonstrated repeatedly, to have those coalitions be able to move their agendas through a political process successfully emerging with an adopted law or policy. It is one thing to be involved in issues; it is another to consistently be the lead in keeping diverse interests together, coordinated and focused until the objective is achieved. That ability to get results and build relationships for “the next issue” is my stock-in-trade and something that I believe is unique in this race.

    S.R.: How are you going to keep Portland affordable and livable for all citizens?

    J.B.: Portlanders are rightfully concerned that our city is growing less affordable. Housing prices, while lower than other parts of the country, have been rising rapidly. Even with the recent cool-down, prices for both home purchases and rents are quite high.

    Additionally, resources are not keeping pace with populations trends responding to changing neighborhoods. More and more, people are moving to East Portland neighborhoods in search of more affordable homes and business space and all too often, needed resources do not follow. I will work to better align neighborhood goals and needs with development efforts because improving an area should not mean that long-time residents should be required to move.

    S.R.: How will you make a difference in the lives of the people living on the streets?

    J.B.: The biggest difference that needs to be made in the lives of people living on the streets is to ensure that they do not have to live on the streets. We need to continue and expand our commitment to increase decent affordable housing. To do this, I will work with community development corporations (CDCs) to identify sites for rehabilitation and new housing projects. I will enforce the new requirement to have 30 percent of urban renewal funds to be set aside to fund affordable housing projects. I will also continue to work with the Affordable Housing NOW! Coalition to have the city meet and maintain a commitment of at least $30 million for Housing Investment. Lastly, I will work with housing advocates at the state level to encourage the state to increase its commitment to affordable housing funding to add to city housing funds.

    S.R.: What is your opinion of the way the city does business and what would you change?

    J.B.: As a community organizer by profession, grassroots involvement has been a cornerstone of any effort with which I’ve ever been involved. I think that the City Council needs to get out of City Hall more often and into the community.

    Here’s how I plan to do that: First, I do not believe that Portlanders who live in outlying neighborhoods should be required to make a pilgrimage to City Hall to get help from a city official or have input into city issues. To that end, I will establish a series of field offices for my commission office in various neighborhoods throughout the city. To start, I will open two offices east of I-205 and one in St. Johns.

    Second, it is often discussed that the City Council should occasionally have its meetings in places other than City Hall. This needs to move beyond the “nice-to-do” stage and to the “must-do” list. At least every other month, the City Council should meet in a school or community center or union hall or homeless shelter in various neighborhoods throughout the city.

    Third, while the City Council schedules meetings for late Wednesday afternoons or evenings, these sessions are often canceled. The City Council must make a concerted effort to meet in the evenings so that people wanting to come testify on an issue or simply watch can do so without taking time off work.

    Lastly, I will support the expansion of the neighborhood association concept to include non-geographic representation of communities of color. I believe the geographic-based neighborhood association system continues to have a role to play but that those associations cannot be everything to everyone. I believe there has to be a broader array of options for representation and involvement and we can start that expansion by discussing and adopting recommendations that are being developed by numerous groups throughout the city.

    For more great news and street culture pick up a Street Roots. Support a vendor and get a great read.

    Friday, February 29, 2008

    New Orleans facing another storm on homelessness and housing

    On Thursday The Times-Picayune reported that two experts from the United Nations said thousands of black families would continue to suffer displacement and homelessness if the demolition of 4,500 public housing units is not halted, but federal housing officials in New Orleans countered that they have units available immediately for former public housing residents displaced by Katrina.

    U.N.-appointed experts Miloon Kothari, the U.N. Human Rights Council's investigator for housing, and Gay McDougall, an expert on minority issues, urged U.S. and local government leaders to further include current and former residents in discussions that would help them return home.

    "I think this is vindication of what public housing advocates have been saying from day one," said Monique Harden, co-director of the public interest law firm Advocates for Environmental Human Rights, who testified before Geneva-based U.N. experts.

    "Recovery must mean the end of displacement for the people of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast," added Harden, who returned to New Orleans last week. "What we have instead is recovery that demolishes affordable housing."

    Read more
  • U.N. slams Feds on housing in New Orleans


  • This comes a day after the Mayor of New Orleans released a plan to push hundreds of people on the streets into crowded barracks as a solution to the on-going housing crisis in the Big Easy.

  • Swept to the barracks



  • All of this of course has warranted a response from the Feds asking the mayor to think about things.

  • Feds say hold


  • It's thought more than 12,000 people are actually living on the streets after emergency shelters are full.

    Seattle police union says it's their job to write park exclusions

    The city of Seattle just put out a public relations fire over the discovery that it destroys homeless camps on city property. Now the Parks Department is hiring seven people as park rangers who will have the power to banish people for camping in the city’s downtown parks and committing other violations of park rules.

    The rangers won’t be able to do it without a fight, however: The Seattle police union says that it is police work to write parks exclusion notices, which can ban people from parks for days or months, with union president Rich O’Neill threatening to file an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board.

    Read more...
  • Seattle privatized
  • Monday, February 25, 2008

    You can help Street Roots, yeah you...

    Want to throw a house party to help Street Roots? Maybe your business wants to partner to make a difference. Possible you just want to give Portland's leading social justice newspaper a donation!

    Find out different ways you can help Street Roots today!

  • Check it out!
  • Thursday, February 21, 2008

    New Street Roots on the way tomorrow

    The feature story (House of Cards) dives into the subprime market collapse and how it stands to disproportionately affect low-income and minority borrowers.

    A Q & A with council candidate Jeff Bissonnette talks affordable housing and economic development, and Artis (the Spoonman) offers his insights after 20 years on the road. FInd out all about the Homegrown Terrorism and Violent Radicalization Act, read a Sunday night movie in the making on the street culture page, read some great street poetry, and explore death and laughter with Soup Can Sam.

    Subprime the latest policy of poverty

    On the one side of the subprime regulation debate, you have an industry that says these loans provide homeownership opportunities to people who wouldn’t otherwise qualify for a loan.

    On the other side are advocates who are watching foreclosure rates climb, homeowners losing homes, credit and hope, and communities boarding up.
    In the middle, at an alarming proportion, are low-income and minority families, the ones too often blamed for their own "misfortune."

    In fact, there are many factors at play in this exploitation of the American Dream: Conventional banks that deal in prime mortgages have left low-income minority neighborhoods in favor of more lucrative communities. In their absence, alternative lenders have filled the void. And the mortgage market is no longer an agreement between a lender and a borrower. Loans are chopped up into financial investments with high yields for some and high-interest for others, complete with an incentive system to lenders who sell high-interest loans that, even if they end in foreclosure, return a profit to investors.

    A study by the Oregon Center for Public Policy found that in 2006, about half of all middle-income black and Hispanic borrowers in Oregon received subprime loans. That’s compared with only 25 percent of white borrowers making the same amount of money. Credit ratings, which the study does not analyze, could be a factor in these outcomes, but the disparity appeared at all income levels, and the figures echo similar findings in studies across the country: Subprime loans are concentrated in lower-income neighborhoods, among minorities, even though it is estimated that between 30 percent and 50 percent of those receiving subprime loans would qualify for prime rate mortgages.

    The industry’s claim of the mortgage of last resort rings false.

    Call it discrimination, economic segregation, or more ugly terms, what we have is an entire money-making scheme that keeps poor people paying more, undercuts homeownership and erodes the social and economic structure of minority neighborhoods. It is a set-up ripe for predatory lenders that perpetuate and aggravate the cycle of debt, poverty and homelessness.

    Meanwhile, the federal government continues its punishing crusade to cut off assistance -— in health care, emergency food programs and employment services — to the very people victimized by its policies. President Bush’s 2009 budget would cut more than $200 million in federal assistance to Oregon, including cuts to energy assistance, adult education and worker training programs, and Head Start. The symptoms get the headlines, but these are the real policies of poverty.

    It is time for state and local governments to say not in our communities, not to our people. If the larger policies at work are not in our best interest, lawmakers in Salem have to make up the difference. It is imperative that legislators push through not only the remedial subprime reform House Bill 3603, but follow through next session with the larger protections offered in the more comprehensive Senate Bill 1090, which now languishes in committee.

    More importantly, however, the larger policies of poverty must be called out, and the perpetuation of economic discrimination taken as a nationwide responsibility. We have to stop punishing the victims, and hold the oppressors accountable.

    Housing Candidate Forum Q & A's

    Housing Opportunity Candidate Forum for City Council Seat No. 2 Feb 21

    On February 21st, a broad base of community organizations held the Housing Opportunity Candidate Forum for candidates for Portland City Seat No. 2 to hear candidate veiws on homelessness and affordable housing. The candidates who participated in the forum are Nick Fish, Jim Middaugh, Ed Garren, Fred Stewart and Harold Williams III.

    In addition to the discussion at the forum, Street Roots, Sisters of the Road, JOIN, Coalition for Homeless Families, Affordable Housing NOW!, Community Alliance of Tenants and the Community Development Network developed the following list of questions designed to get to the heart of a candidate’s views on the issues.

  • Read the candidates reponses
  • Tuesday, February 19, 2008

    11th Annual Homeless Marathon on KBOO tomorrow

    The 11th annual Homelessness Marathon from Nashville, TN starts tomorrow and will be aired on KBOO (90.7) starting at 4 o'clock in the afternoon.

    You can also listen live on-line at
  • Listen live


  • The Homelessness Marathon is the world's leading broadcast focusing on homelessness and poverty. Last year's broadcast from Fresno, California aired on more than 120 radio stations coast-to-coast with another 30 or so stations across Canada.

    "This year, we picked Nashville," explains the Homelessness Marathon's director, Jeremy Weir Alderson, "partly because it is a city at the crossroads in terms of its treatment of homeless people, and in this respect, it is like many other cities across the United States."

    Call in numbers are 1-877-NOBODY-8 (877-662-6398) for anyone, and 1-866-LEFT-OUT (866-533-8688) is a special number to give an extra for people who are homeless, formerly homeless or afraid they're about to become homeless.

    Here's the schedule: (all times are eastern standard)

    Hour 1 - SHORT: Welcome from host "Nobody" (live) - (7pm) LONG: A panel of homeless Nashvillians.

    Hour 2 - SHORT: Performing A One Night Count - (8pm) LONG: Homelessness in Music City - Part 1 - The Civic View. Co-hosts: George Gruhn, CEO of Gruhn Guitars and Howard Gentry, Chairman, Mayor's Homelessness Commission.

    Hour 3 - SHORT: Housing First -(9pm) LONG: Homelessness in Music City - Part 2 - The Street View. Co-Hosts: Father Charlie Strobel, founding director, Campus for Human Development, and Clemmie Green Lee of the Nashville Homeless Power Project.

    Hour 4 - SHORT: Poetry by Homeless Teens - (10pm) LONG: Homeless Nation I - A survey of homelessness in Benton Harbor, Michigan; New Orleans, and Denver

    Hour 5 - SHORT: Homeless Vets - (11pm) LONG: Homelessness, Crime and Criminalization. Co-Hosts: Matt Leber, organizer, Nashville Homeless Power Project and Tulin Ozdeger, civil rights director, National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty.

    Hour 6 - SHORT: Street Poetry - (mid) LONG: "The War and The Poor - Co-Hosts: Norman Solomon, author of "War Made Easy" and Frances Fox Piven, author of "The War At Home: The Domestic Cost of Bush's Militarism."

    Hour 7 - SHORT: Addressing Rural Homelessness - (1am) LONG: The Fight in Fresno - A live remote from Fresno, CA.

    Hour 8 - SHORT: A Homeless Job Program - (2am) LONG: The Working Poor. Guest Host: Nell Levin, coordinator, Tennessee Alliance for Progress. Co-Hosts: William Miles, Nashville Jobs with Justice, Cornell Professor of Sociology Thomas Hirschl.

    Hour 9 - SHORT: Registering Homeless Voters - (3am) LONG: Homeless Nation II: A survey of homelessness in Los Angeles, Ontario, CA; and Santa Cruz, Ca

    Hour 10 - SHORT: Generational Homelessness - (4am) LONG: International Hour. Guest Host: Nell Levin. Co-host: Peter Fredriksson, senior adviser to the Housing Ministry of Finland.

    Hour 11 - SHORT: Homeless Mothers - (5am) LONG: Fighting Back - Co-Hosts to be Cheri Honkala, director of the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign,
    Paul Boden, director of the Western Regional Advocacy Project.

    Hour 12 - SHORT: Street Poetry - (6am) LONG: Health Care and Homelessness. Co-hosts, John Lozier, Director National Health Care for the Homeless, Dan McMullan, a disabled homeless advocate.

    Hour 13 - SHORT: A Profile in Homelessness - (7am) LONG: Will the Foreclosure Crisis Drive People to the Streets? Co-hosts Danilo Pelletiere, research director, National Low Income Housing Coalition and a co-host TBA.

    Hour 14 - SHORT: A Homeless Romance - (8am) LONG: First: Where Is The Housing? Co-Host, Jeremy Rosen, executive director, National Policy and Advocacy Council on Homelessness. Next: A panel of homeless vets.

    Monday, February 18, 2008

    Join us this Thursday for the Housing Candidate Forum

    Join us for a candidate forum with candidates seeking Erik Sten’s seat on City Council. A broad base of community
    organizations will be asking candidates questions about homelessness and affordable housing.

    First Unitarian Church, 1011 SW 12th Ave, Portland, Oregon 97205
    Thursday February 21st, Noon-1:30PM



    Sponsors of this event include, Street Roots, Community Development Network, JOIN, Sisters Of The Road, Community Alliance of Tenants, Affordable Housing Now!, and the Coalition for Homeless Families.

    Thursday, February 7, 2008

    Is Portland a magnet for poor folk? Check out the new SRs tomorrow to find out

    In communities throughout the country you will hear a common complaint by critics of homeless services - our city is a magnet for homeless people because of services. If we build it, they will come.

    Liberal communities up and down the West Coast have been dubbed by many as a place of last resort for people experiencing homelessness. Los Angeles has been called the homeless capital of the United States, San Francisco, a bum's paradise, Seattle and Portland, a place to go to access great services.

    Street Roots takes a look at what's happening on the ground and talks to city officials in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Jose, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle - giving you the real dirt.



    Other stories this issue include a look Urban Opportunities, a empowerment based job skills programs for homeless youth, and a Q & A with the young and up and coming Portland City Council candidate John Branam. Other features include three in-depth grassroots news pieces from our sister paper, the Big Issue Kenya, and lots of poetry and prose from the streets.

    Support a vendor today, and get a great read.

    Street Roots awarded "volunteer innovation" honors from Trailblazers and Hands on Greater Portland

    Street Roots has been awarded with the 2008 Portland Trailblazers/Hands on Greater Portland 'Volunteer Innovation" award.

    The Portland Trail Blazers/Hands On Greater Portland Heart of the Community Awards luncheon celebrates volunteerism and honors outstanding volunteers and volunteer programs that are the Heart of our Community.

  • Portland Trailblazers/Hands on Greater Portland Awards


  • Thank you to all of our volunteers that makes Street Roots what it is today!

    Along with Street Roots, Senator Margaret Carter will be honored for the "Heart of the Community Award."

    The housing opportunity candidate forum

    Join us for a candidate forum with candidates seeking Erik Sten’s seat on City Council. A broad base of community
    organizations will be asking candidates questions about homelessness and affordable housing.

    First Unitarian Church, 1011 SW 12th Ave, Portland, Oregon 97205
    Thursday February 21st, Noon-1:30PM



    Sponsors of this event include, Street Roots, Community Development Network, JOIN, Sisters Of The Road, Community Alliance of Tenants and the Coalition for Homeless Families.

    People on the streets targeted with sit-lie enforcement

    Between Nov. 1, and Nov. 19, Portland police issued 42 sidewalk
    obstruction (sit-lie) warnings and six citations to people sitting on
    sidewalks, according to documents obtained by Street Roots. At least 34
    of those warning and citations were to people experiencing homelessness.
    Several police reports do not determine if an individual was "transient"
    or had a place of residence.

    After a 30-day lull in enforcement – police began to issue more sidewalk
    warnings and citations on Dec. 19. From Dec. 19 and 27, police issued
    seven warnings and five citations, all to people experiencing
    homelessness.

    The latest round of warnings and citations issued brings the total number
    to 62 warnings and 14 citations issued since the beginning of September
    2007.

    The most recent revision of the sidewalk obstruction ordinance bans
    individuals from sitting or lying on public sidewalks from 7 a.m. to 9
    p.m. The maximum penalty for violation of the ordinance is $250.
    Beyond the majority of individuals receiving warnings – Street Roots found
    that at least 11 of the individuals receiving warnings, and five who
    received citations, were sleeping at the time of enforcement.

    Thursday, January 31, 2008

    Bill O'Reilly slams homeless vets, slam Bill O'Reilly!

    It's Fox Attack
  • 200,000 vets can't be wrong
  • Help protect civil rights for people on the streets in Seattle

    The City of Seattle is on the verge of creating one of the most anti-homeless environments on the West Coast.

    A new policy being created by Seattle officials would extend the city’s parks exclusion ordinance — which was designed to ensure that public parks remain family friendly — to all public property throughout the city, no matter how urban or remote. This policy will make survival outside illegal in a city where the shelters are past capacity and meeting perhaps 60 percent of the demand for emergency shelter.

  • Read more and take action!
  • Friday, January 11, 2008

    Washington County's faith-based community is kicking it, Erik Sten and Angela Davis are throwing down and Randy Leonard's got some loo's

    The new edition of Street Roots is on the beat. The lead stories this issue are about Washington County's faith-based community joining forces to end homelessness and Erik Sten standing firm on a homeless day access center downtown. Other features this issue include Q & A's with candidate Chris Smith and former Black Panther Angela Davis.

    We highlight Commissioner Leonard's new design for public restrooms downtown, inform readers on what's happening on the ground in Paris with homeless and housing advocates and Michael Anderson with Affordable Housing Now presents a 'to-do' list for the future leader of the Bureau of Housing and Community Development.

    Erik Sten floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee, and we give action steps to support activists in New Orleans who were beaten, pepper-sprayed and arrested demanding the halt of 4,500 public housing units from being demolished - all of this and much more in this edition of Street Roots.

    Pick one up today and support one of our many great vendors!

    Street Roots community resources on services, policy research and criminalization now on-line

    Street Roots has put together a community resource page for people experiencing homelessness and poverty, social service providers, journalists, students, policy wonks, advocates and others.

    Under the Street Roots section you will find information about the organization ranging from our annual report to the newspapers editorial schedule to our strategic plan.

    Under community resources you will find information on the following resources -

    Rose City Resource: We have itemized specific sections to download from the Rose City Resources. You can download itemized updated information on services available throughout the Portland region.

    Downtown map and services: You can download a map and information on downtown services available for people experiencing homelessness and poverty.

    Research and policy: This section contains a cross-section of updated reports and policy research concerning homelessness, affordable housing and civil rights.

    Know your rights: In this section you will find information regarding legal advice, information on laws that target people experiencing homelessness, complaint procedures, and much more.

    You can access Street Roots Community Resources through our website and at the wiki pages themselves

  • Resources you can use


  • Wiki pages at Street Roots website
  • Thursday, January 10, 2008

    Erik Sten: floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee

    From the new issue of Street Roots coming out tomorrow...

    Erik Sten was dubbed the “Street fighter” back in 2003 by Street Roots for his constant effort to work in favor of the poor. Erik has proven to be more than a city commissioner, or a major influence at City Hall. He’s an individual that has helped craft what Portland is today. And we, along with many others in the city, will miss him tremendously when he retires from the council on April 1.

    Newspaper editorial boards around the city are holding up his achievements to obtain — or in many cases simply retain — affordable housing and spearhead local efforts to end homelessness, but Erik is more than just a figurehead for a social movement.

    Erik Sten is one of the few individuals in Portland politics that knows many people experiencing homelessness by name. He’s a craftsman for creating an even playing field for grassroots organizations and campaigns made up of the very individuals he represents. His efforts to enhance the lives of individuals from all walks of life, cultures and interests is something that we shouldn’t take for granted. Inside a broken bureaucracy, Erik has found ways to create change and to empower people to believe in the common good.

    In fact, less than a week after his announcement to leave City Hall, he found himself standing in front of a jammed Old Town/Chinatown neighborhood meeting – chock full of service providers, housing and homeless activists, city staffers, uneasy neighborhood activists, frustrated business owners, and anxious developers — all there to hear what the commissioner had to say on the now controversial homeless day-access center.

    In classic form, Erik spoke to every interest in the room in a way that was attentive, forthcoming and inspiring. Instead of being baited into a debate spurred on by sensationalized media coverage designed to pit one side against the other, the commissioner simply disarmed the tension and broke things down in a way that every interest in the room could understand and respect.

    On many occasions, local and national interest groups have taken shots at Erik’s intended to undermine his progressive approach of creating change through innovative strategies, collaboration and respect.

    But Erik has always stood tall. His compassion and wisdom, along with his patient demeanor and excellent public speaking skills, have allowed for a political career that floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee — like a true street fighter.

    And in all of Erik’s praise, from the streets to the ball, we cannot go without mentioning the individuals on Erik’s staff that have shown patience, perseverance and skill to make Portland the best city on the West Coast, bar none – individuals such as Margaret Bax, Marshall Runkel, Rich Rodgers, Bob Durston, Jim Middaugh, Cindy Gaulke, Jamaal Folsom, Angie Harris, and many more. Some of whom have been more than kind to the media and in many ways have helped bring Street Roots into a different class of newspapers in Portland.

    Still, with only three months left in Erik’s tenure, we have lots of work to do. Let’s get to it.