The Oklahoman

Pallet shelters no quick solution in RI

Wheels ‘turn slow’ for remedy for homelessne­ss

- Patrick Anderson

PROVIDENCE, R.I. – One of the micro-cottages known as Pallet shelters can be assembled with a small group of people – no specialize­d training required – in about the time it takes to put together a flat-pack living room set.

But standing up a small village of the units to provide a temporary home for people living on the street is taking Rhode Island considerab­ly longer.

On a freshly laid gravel lot, 45 Pallet shelters known as ECHO Village sit dark and empty less than a mile from a tent encampment Providence police planned to clear.

ECHO Village was designed to help people just like the residents of the encampment­s who can’t or won’t move into traditiona­l homeless shelters.

But constructi­on of the village was halted at the end of February, a little more than a month after it began, because the state Department of Housing was still working to get the permits it needed from other parts of state government.

So Laura Jaworski, executive director of House of Hope CDC, the nonprofit agency that will run ECHO Village, waits.

And waits.

“There’s been a lot of head-scratching,” she said last week.

Jaworski doesn’t blame anyone for the delay or suggest state officials are doing anything but trying to apply the law. However, she said, the “wheels” of bureaucrac­y “turn slow.”

What’s particular­ly challengin­g is that the state’s building and fire codes were not written for places like ECHO Village and don’t have categories to match it.

Is it a congregate living facility? Forty-five single-family homes? A motel? A trailer park?

Since it is none of those things, ECHO Village has had to apply for a series of exemptions from code requiremen­ts

While the shelters are new to Rhode Island, they exist in 100 communitie­s in the United States and Canada, according to Pallet.

such as the distance between buildings and specifications on light fixtures and sprinklers.

Despite each shelter containing only 70 square feet of living space, a single bed and no flammable wooden framing, each shelter is required to have more fire protection than the old houses that make up most of Rhode Island’s codegrandf­athered housing stock.

To get around the code requiremen­t that each tiny unit have a fire sprinkler, major plumbing for something so small and temporary, the Fire Safety Code Board of Review agreed to a “dry chemical automatic fire-extinguish­ing system,” according to board meeting minutes.

Jaworski described the dry suppressio­n system as little pods that release a chemical flame suppressor when exposed to high heat. The fire marshal required direct proof from the manufactur­er that the system would work as intended, she said.

The fire marshal signed off on ECHO Village last month, and the state Building Code Standards Committee approved variances Thursday.

“The approval on Thursday is the green light we’re looking for to get constructi­on started again,” Jaworski said.

ECHO Village eyes ‘mid-summer’ opening

If work is restarted, Jaworski said she hopes to have ECHO Village ready to open in “mid-summer,” which is around three months later than hoped for when the location of the village was announced at the start of this year.

In the world of constructi­on projects and government regulation, three months is not a long time.

But it is sign of how slow and challengin­g it is to build new public infrastruc­ture in Rhode Island, especially if it is something out of the ordinary.

After all, the whole idea of Pallet shelters, which Jaworski calls “rapid deployment units” is that they are inexpensiv­e and quick to build.

While the shelters are new to Rhode Island and its code-enforcemen­t officials, they exist in 100 communitie­s in the United States and Canada, according to Pallet, the Washington state company that makes them.

Financing shelters

The Rhode Island Department of Housing has committed $3.3 million in federal funds, mostly pandemic aid, to ECHO Village.

Of that total, $1 million is for operations, which includes around-the-clock staffing of the complex. The rest of the money is for constructi­on, including a separate bathroom and shower building, office, laundry, community room and dog run.

Typically, temporary shelters are focused on the winter when sleeping outside is most dangerous. But ECHO Village is set to open when the weather is warmest, and it is unclear how long it will stay open.

Housing Department spokeswoma­n Emily Marshall said the state has a contract to keep ECHO Village open through September. To keep it running when the weather gets cold again will take a new funding source.

 ?? KRIS CRAIG/THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL ?? ECHO Village Pallet shelters await placement on state land in Providence, Rhode Island.
KRIS CRAIG/THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL ECHO Village Pallet shelters await placement on state land in Providence, Rhode Island.
 ?? KRIS CRAIG/THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL ?? Advocates for the homeless in Rhode Island set up this Pallet shelter at the State House in October 2022 and called for the state to ramp up shelter for the winter.
KRIS CRAIG/THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL Advocates for the homeless in Rhode Island set up this Pallet shelter at the State House in October 2022 and called for the state to ramp up shelter for the winter.

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