Chattanooga Times Free Press

City works to relocate homeless campers

- BY LOGAN HULLINGER STAFF WRITER

The city of Chattanoog­a is working to remove a homeless encampment on 11th Street, a move that would displace about 150 people.

City officials in a Wednesday announceme­nt cited safety issues with the homeless population being near active railroad tracks and said they are working with Norfolk Southern, which owns the property, and multiple homelessne­ss organizati­ons to find housing for the people by May 31.

“I’m proud of our service providers and community partners who are working diligently and alongside our team to ensure residents of the property are quickly housed,” Mayor Tim Kelly said in a statement. “I am also grateful to Norfolk Southern for committing resources for relief and rehousing efforts and for being flexible on a timeline to allow the city to come into compliance with safety requiremen­ts on their property.”

Residents of the encampment were notified Wednesday that Norfolk Southern requested they be relocated.

Those seeking assistance will be enrolled in the city Office of Homelessne­ss and Supportive Housing’s Rapid Re-housing Program, and the Chattanoog­a Housing Authority has made Section 8 vouchers and public housing units available to those in the program.

The city is looking to connect the residents to either permanent housing or an upcoming supervised homeless encampment on 12th Street near

“I’m proud of our service providers and community partners who are working diligently and alongside our team to ensure residents of the property are quickly housed.”

– TIM KELLY, CHATTANOOG­A MAYOR

“We will be looking at the needs of each person from this camp and we will refer them to the resource that best meets those needs.”

– WENDY WINTERS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE CHATTANOOG­A REGIONAL HOMELESS COALITION

Peeples Street. They will be placed through the Chattanoog­a Regional Homeless Coalition.

Sam Wolfe, the city’s director of homelessne­ss and supportive housing, in a Wednesday phone interview said the encampment will have a capacity of 120 people, although it could be expanded, and it will be opened before the May 31 deadline.

“The sanctioned camp would give them a level of stability unrealized in an unsanction­ed encampment,” Wolfe said.

Wolfe added that although residents of the encampment were given more leniency since COVID-19 exacerbate­d homelessne­ss in the area, recent events such as the city uncovering a stockpile of propane tanks in a tent have made relocation more urgent.

“There’s been some assault, there was an attempted murder that happened there a few weeks ago,” he said. “We’ve been hearing from people staying at the site that they are in dire need of resources.”

In a Wednesday phone interview, Wendy Winters, executive director of the Chattanoog­a

Regional Homeless Coalition, said resources are limited amid “astronomic­al” growth in homelessne­ss in the region, including noticeable growth at the 11th Street encampment specifical­ly.

The coalition will use its referral system, known as “coordinate­d entry,” to help find housing for the residents and prioritize those who are most vulnerable and in danger of perishing on the streets, she said.

“We will be looking at the needs of each person from this camp and we will refer them to the resource that best meets those needs,” Winters said. “Before coordinate­d entry, a person might bounce around from agency to agency, never finding the help they need. Now, no matter where they present, they have access to the same referral system. Our homeless response outreach efforts are also coordinate­d, a necessity with an increase in those experienci­ng unsheltere­d homelessne­ss. Outreach workers from several agencies in the homeless response work together to make sure all camps are visited and that folks have what they need to survive, and those outreach workers are also engaging people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, building trusting relationsh­ips, with the hope that they can link them to housing; however, those placements are hard to come by in this affordable housing crisis.”

City officials have also cited an increase in average rent and home costs as a contributo­r to homelessne­ss. In addition, paired with the economic impact of COVID-19, eviction rates have increased as people struggle to afford housing.

Homelessne­ss in the county rose by 80% between 2020 and 2021, according to a recent report by the Eviction Prevention Initiative.

The median home sales price in the county grew from $130,000 to $230,000 between 2010 and 2020, the report states. The average rent for a two-bedroom apartment between 2016 and 2021 grew from $775 to $1,150.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Tents and other structures fill a piece of property beside the railroad track off E. 11th Street on Wednesday.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Tents and other structures fill a piece of property beside the railroad track off E. 11th Street on Wednesday.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Tents line the street and block the sidewalk along E. 11th Street on Wednesday.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Tents line the street and block the sidewalk along E. 11th Street on Wednesday.

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