Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Portland delays vote on homeless camping

Council postpones action amid angry opposition to plan to fund designated areas.

- Associated press

PORTLAND, Ore. — City Council members in Portland pushed back a vote on a budget measure that would finance the constructi­on of designated camping areas for homeless people after residents expressed strong opposition during public testimony.

Mayor Ted Wheeler has proposed allocating $27 million of the city’s budget to build a network of large, outdoor sites where homeless people would be allowed to camp. A camping ban elsewhere would phase in once six designated camping areas have been built over 18 months.

“It’s going to take commitment from all of us to do the hard work that lies ahead,” Wheeler said during Thursday’s meeting. “These allocation­s are a down payment on that work.”

The $27 million would help launch the first three campsites, with nearly half going toward their operationa­l costs for the remainder of the fiscal year. About $4 million of it would be directed to the sites’ preparatio­n and constructi­on.

The proposal would amend the city’s budget for the current fiscal year to include the new projection­s.

Public testimony in opposition to the measure and the money that will fund it grew so heated during Thursday’s meeting that City Council members had to leave the chambers and conduct the rest of the meeting online. Members of the public were moved to another room in City Hall after some who opposed the plan interrupte­d council members and had their microphone­s cut after refusing to abide by time limits in emotionall­y charged testimony.

“What is needed is housing,” Ben Kopsa, the housing case manager with Transition Projects, a homeless shelter and services provider in Portland, told the council. He said the funds would go “into running basically parking lots.”

Another resident, Shannon Kearns, said the plan amounted to “putting money into internment camps under the guise of support for our most marginaliz­ed community members.”

The six designated campsites would initially serve up to 150 people, with 24-hour management, access to services such as food, hygiene, litter collection and treatment for mental health and substance abuse.

While amendments to the budget proposal were voted on during Thursday’s meeting, the vote on the proposal itself was delayed after a motion from Wheeler. The next vote on the budget measure has not been scheduled.

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