Tarp-covered tents line a sidewalk beneath a highway and adjacent to downtown Seattle on March 8. Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan wants to move hundreds more homeless people into tiny homes, emergency shelters and other immediate housing in the next 90 days. (Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press)

Tarp-covered tents line a sidewalk beneath a highway and adjacent to downtown Seattle on March 8. Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan wants to move hundreds more homeless people into tiny homes, emergency shelters and other immediate housing in the next 90 days. (Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press)

Seattle mayor to move quickly to house more homeless

  • By Phuong Le The Associated Press
  • Sunday, June 3, 2018 8:30pm
  • News

By Phuong Le

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said Wednesday she wants to get hundreds more homeless people into tiny houses, emergency shelters and other safe housing over the next 90 days.

Durkan unveiled details of a plan that would use $6.3 million from the recent sale of city property to provide temporary housing for 522 additional people each night, roughly a 25 percent increase. Currently, the city operates about 2,032 shelter beds, which are near capacity each night.

The mayor, who took office last November, said the short-term plan will get people out of “horrible conditions” but it’s only one part of larger effort that includes more permanent housing as well as mental health and addiction treatment.

“The permanent solution is to build more affordable housing,” she said at a press conference. “But we need more humane, more safe places for people to live and be so we don’t have tents on our streets, garbage in our thoroughfares and needles in places.”

Durkan’s plan comes two weeks after she signed into a law a hotly debated tax on large businesses to pay for additional homeless services and low-income housing over five years.

The new employee-hours tax will begin in January and raise an additional $48 million annually.

A coalition of businesses is collecting signatures to put a referendum on the November ballot to repeal the tax. The No Tax on Jobs campaign has received more than $350,000 in pledges of support from Amazon, Starbucks, Kroger, Albertsons and others.

Since declaring a civil emergency on homelessness in 2015, this booming, affluent city has been struggling to respond to increasing numbers of people living on the streets, in cars and shelters.

Seattle has authorized new homeless encampments, expanded shelter beds and opened a 24-hour homeless shelter that is open to all, even those struggling with addiction. Still, the region had the third-highest number of homeless people in the U.S. and saw 169 homeless deaths last year.

Durkan said her plan, which needs City Council approval, would represent the largest increase in shelter beds that the city has had.

The plan would create new tiny home villages, add beds at current shelters including at City Hall and temporarily use vacant building to house dozens more.

The mayor spoke Wednesday from the city’s newest homeless encampment in Seattle’s Crown Hill neighborhood, where freshly painted tiny homes, about 120 square feet, were ready for new tenants to move in. Each wooden structure is equipped with electrical outlets and a heater; a separate building will house a kitchen and showers.

Erika Nagy, who lives a few blocks from the encampment, questioned the mayor about security, staffing and costs. Nagy said in an interview later that she’s concerned about crime, how the city is spending tens of millions of dollars and whether people are getting into permanent housing.

The city spent $68 million in 2017 on homelessness and plans to spend $78 million this year.

Charmaine Min, who works full-time and currently lives in a similar tiny house village, said having a roof over her head, a place to put her things and a door to lock behind her gave her peace of mind, and allowed her to feel like a member of the community again.

More in News

Work begins on sewer project

Intermittent closures planned in Port Hadlock

Clallam commissioners interested in section of forest for ODT

Clallam County commissioners plan to send a letter to… Continue reading

Deputy Mayor Navarra Carr accepts a Live United Award on behalf of the city of Port Angeles.
Port Angeles honored with Live United award

The city of Port Angeles was honored with a Live… Continue reading

Smoke vents from the rear car deck doors as firefighters battle a vehicle fire aboard the ferry MV Coho upon its afternoon arrival in Port Angeles on Thursday. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Crews evaluated after RV fire on Coho ferry

Combined training helped during incident, deputy chief says

Staff favors denial for rezone

Proposal would pave way for Dollar General Plus

Clallam Transit considering proposal for Narcan at Gateway center

Board members want time for more discussion before next meeting

Turns restricted during roundabout construction

Drivers at the intersection of state highways 104 and 19… Continue reading

Bridge closures canceled for May 17, May 18

Hood Canal bridge closures originally scheduled for this weekend have… Continue reading

Roxanne Pfiefer-Fisher, a volunteer with a team from Walmart, sorts through sections of what will become a slide during Wednesday’s opening day of a community rebuild of the Dream Playground at Erickson Playfield in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Volunteers flock to Dream Playground to start build

Group effort reminds organizers of efforts in 2021, 2002

Lawsuit over pool ban is planned

Lawyers say they’re suing city of Port Townsend, YMCA

Peninsula Behavioral Health adds 3 programs

Services help those experiencing psychosis, provide housing