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Submitted by Phil Owen on Wed, 02/07/2007 - 9:24am.
The City continued its justifications for turning its back on the poor at the Council meeting last night. Mayor Foutch talked at length about the growth in services in the last twenty years. Laura Ware talked about the City's offer to allocate $200,000 to services this year. The City Manager talked about his notion that homelessness is a regional and national issue, and that the tent city had picked the wrong target.
» Let's get a few things straight: 1. Tent city residents are not asking for money for new services. In fact, the City is clearly not connecting the dots between the $200,000 it has offered for services and the fact that Tent City residents ARE asking for a service review committee to ensure that service agencies treat their clients with basic dignity and respect. 2. Tent city residents are not asking the city to fund new housing projects. They ARE asking for the opportunity to be self-reliant as a community... an opportunity that will not be found in government funded housing projects. 3. Tent city residents are not asking the city to lobby the Federal or State governments for relief. They ARE demanding to be included in our community, to be visible, and to have the right to exist. Laura Ware particularly failed to understand the nature of the conflict in our city. She claimed that the opposition to the new sidewalk law and the request for a permanent location are two separate issues. Yet they truly are one and the same. Tent city residents are demanding the opportunity to exist in peace, to have at least a few spare moments in the day when their lives are not subject to the whims and prejudices of the social service system and the police. Until recently, the sidewalks served as THE ONLY place where that was possible. Now that this opportunity has been taken away, the tent city residents are taking direct action to uphold their basic right to dignity. Residents of the tent city will likely be arrested today for refusing to disperse. Please come downtown to offer them your support and your witness.
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well put (nice use of italics!)
Submitted by chad360 on Wed, 02/07/2007 - 4:02pm.zone an area in oly for no-cost camping, and create use-rules for safety and occupancy, maybe make a int'l hostel adjacent, and have a covered laundry area, lavatory, and public showers
so, other than design issues, why is this so socially polarized?
Why is this being turned into "us vs. them"?
...am I on the wrong side because I pay City Tax on my house? --I feel that way
--and this tax, it is used (against my will I might add) for lame stuff like the ord.
trying to be constructive:
Idea:
Use the online Thurston Geodata site (geodata.org) to find a site owned by an out-of-town owner ( a private owner), and then go "camp"/squat/carpi diem (whatever) there--
my take is that if the owner does not start a complaint, the muni-managers at any level will be left without cause..IE don't squat on City-owned land (I dunno if that area behind the Bro'hood is owned the the city or whatever, I'm just say'n)
Idea:
ask for a private site from a donor...goto the Community Foundation...start a nonprofit (it is easy, ask me I know how! :-)
camp out on kaiser hill, but I am getting the picture that camping out is dangerous now (how lame)
Society
Submitted by Robert Whitlock on Fri, 02/09/2007 - 7:43am.A transformation is underway.In the Course of Events