Nothing about the white two-story house in Southeast Portland is out of the ordinary. It’s quiet, with a manicured lawn, tucked into a similarly plain neighborhood. It hardly deserves a second glanceโwhich is exactly what the occupants are going for.
Behind its bland front faรงade, the house is an asylum for victims of a darker side of society: the child sex-trafficking industry.
With few models to base the shelter off of, the dedicated group of community organizations that drew together to create the new long-stay refuge essentially built it from the ground up. Portland’s shelter is more or less flying blind, pouring $300,000 and years of work into an innovative program. The experts who put the shelter together are putting their faith in a surprising place: trusting teens.
Building an honest and open relationship with adults is vital to the young victims’ recovery. Rather than being a traditional lockdown facility, the shelter is built around the idea of openness and inclusion.
MISSING THE NUMBERS
Statistics about child sex trafficking are completely unreliable, as victims rarely report cases, so there’s no irrefutable evidence that child sex trafficking in Portland is more prevalent than in any other major city. But unlike other major cities, Portland has put real money toward the problem. The youth shelter, which opened in December after years of behind-the-scenes work, is, sadly, more of a unique situation than it should be. Multnomah County Commissioner Diane McKeel, one of the leading supporters of the county’s efforts to fund the shelter in August, has been working hard to secure more solidified shelters across the city for this need.
“I always thought of sex trafficking as more of an international, rather than a domestic, issue,” says McKeel. “But it’s happening here and now. These are our children. Let’s take this to the next level.”
Nationally, the US State Department estimates that around 100,000 children are trafficked each yearโbut it’s equally hard to count on the accuracy of this approximation. The challenge of identifying these victims, as well as their pimps, biases statistics of the local trafficking problem, minimizing the enormity of the issue. Sergeant Mike Geiger at Portland Police Bureau’s (PPB) Human Trafficking Unit estimates that the unit picks up an average of two trafficked children a week. But, “it ebbs and flows,” he says.
A PRICKLY PAST
Whether its reputation is deserved or not, Portland launched into the national media as a hotspot for child sex trafficking in 2009, when a cross-country FBI sex work sting picked up seven underage prostitutes in the Rose Cityโranking second only to Seattle and scoring us the nickname “Pornland” from Dan Rather. [“Confessions of a Teenage Prostitute,” Feature, Sept 3, 2009]. Following the negative publicity, the Oregon House of Representatives passed a bill distributing stickers about the state’s human sex-trafficking hotline. But if an underage sex worker called the hotline looking for help, the best they could hope for was to wind up in a local youth shelter that deals with all sorts of kids, not just those exploited by sex trafficking. In November 2010, Mayor Sam Adams announced that “Portland has a reputation for sustainability, as a livable place,” but that reputation has been “stained by becoming a hub for juvenile sex trafficking.”
For the first time in decades, local child-sex-trafficking combatants have hope and excitement for real, long-term change.
NOT YOUR TYPICAL SHELTER
With few examples on which to model the shelter, the dedicated group of community organizations that drew together to create the new long-stay refuge essentially built it from scratch.
Unlike the handful of other sex-trafficking shelters in the country, Portland’s shelter is aiming to feel more like a friendly home than an institutionโit won’t be locked down, so the youth can leave whenever they want. It’s also the only shelter to work with kids of all genders (it already has one transgender teen client). Welcoming victims with diverse backgroundsโand getting them to voluntarily stick aroundโis complicated.
“What if the child is Native American? Has children of their own? Doesn’t speak English?” asks Joslyn Baker, collaboration specialist at Multnomah County’s Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children (CSEC) program. “There are lots of teenagers with lots of layers that need individual attention. We have developed a place that responded to these needs.”
Instead of solely targeting the issue at hand, sexual abuse, the shelter encompasses all relevant adolescent problems, completing the picture.
Along with seven bedrooms, a kitchen, and living room, the space offers on-site tutoring for students who may be years behind their grade level, on-call counseling, and legal advocacy. The shelter will work with anyone under 18, but according to the PPB’s Geiger, the average age for child sex workers in Portland is between 12 and 14 years of age. The shelter is designed to focus on all the bumpy aspects of adolescence with the added trauma of being exploited by trafficking.
“Now that there is a long-term, population-specific shelter available, we have the next step to care in place,” says Esther Nelson, program manager for Portland’s Sexual Assault Resource Center (SARC), who usually deals with emergency, short-term situations. “I am hopeful.”
FROM THE GROUND UP
According to Baker of the CSEC, it took the right combination of peopleโand some financial supportโto get the shelter up and running.
“We were already on the right path in 2009โwe just needed that extra boost,” Baker says. “The system was overwhelmed with need and underwhelmed with funding.”
In 2010, they got that boost by receiving a $47,000 grant from a melting pot of city and local church funds and then $258,000 in funding from the county in August, cementing the shelter’s future. Five organizations teamed up to develop the shelter: PPB’s Human Trafficking Unit, social service agency Janus Youth, SARC, CSEC, and counseling center LifeWorks NW, which works with adult sex workers.
“We feel strongly that long-term, consistent attachments to safe adults is one of the key factors that can assist youth in their healing process,” says Nelson of SARC.
SETTING THE STAGE
Prior to the shelter’s development, child sex-trafficked victims taken off the street were sent to Harry’s Mother, a Janus Youth runaway crisis shelter, or the program’s main office. “A crisis shelter is always in crisis,” says shelter director and Janus Youth veteran Kevin Donegan. He and others think it’s crucial to not just make another crisis shelter, but to establish a calm environment where children are surrounded by similar peers, with the intention of setting an entirely new stage for growth.
“This isn’t an institutional, lockdown facility. I won’t be tackling anyone who wants to leave,” says Donegan. “All I ask for is a conversation before they leave to make sure they’re safe.”
The inside of the house echoes this idea. The seven bedrooms each look like pages out of a Pottery Barn catalog, equipped with colorful, comfortable furniture, stuffed animals, a box of chocolates, and a basket of first-aid and health needs. The living room hosts a large wrap-around couch fit for movie watchingโDonegan offers his Netflix account to all guestsโand a hefty stack of board games. The only unusual decor is a pair of surveillance cameras in each hallway. The shelter aims for rescued kids to stay among the counselors and comfy sofas for at least 30 days, but they can stay for as long as a year. Parents have to consent to their kids’ stay at the facility, though Donegan says that most family members are happy to have their child in a safe space rather than in an unknown, dangerous location.
Up to the point where they reach the shelter, the adult authority figures that most of the troubled teens have come into contact with is often the least trusted: the police.
“The child’s pimp teaches these children that the police are the bad guys,” says PPB’s Geiger. “The biggest challenge we face is redirecting a child’s thought that we are safe and that they are not the criminal, but the victim.” Once the police find the child, it could take months to get the name of their pimp from them, giving the trafficker ample time to leave the area. Geiger says he hopes the new shelter’s comfortable and stress-free environment will bring more victims out of the woodwork.
“With this level of trauma, there’s no quick solution here,” says Geiger. “But I think we can be encouraged that we’ve not just abandoned the issue, we’re moving it in the right direction.”

Does anyone else find the cover photo deeply troubling?
Not really, no. For reasons of wanting to maintain some level of anonymity, i’m sure it was requested that a photo of the house NOT be published. Which is perfectly understandable.
@1~ No, you’re not the only one. i found it pretty harrowing, but sadly appropriate.
i just want to say this ~ i spent several years living on the streets of Portland, as a very young teenager; 13-16 years old. Most of the girls that i knew prostituted to make money. And they did drugs to escape from the reality that they were living. And they had to prostitute to make the money to do the drugs. While there were a few hardcore, fringe girls who had been pulled into a scene that i stayed far away from, we all knew what was going on & who these people were. And most girls knew to stay away from them. They tried, at least. But, those guys were everywhere. And their 14 yr. old salesgirls trying to bring in fresh kids was really effective. Everyone, all of these kids, are hooked on something. And the offer from a fellow kid to do some free dope & have have a warm room for a night is pretty attractive. It usually ends badly…
So 2 things ~ First of all, the kids ( & it IS boys & girls ) see the cops as the enemy, as bad guys, because they ARE! They bust them for petty possession & prostitution. They harass them, they threaten to turn them in as runaways. When most of these kids are on the streets because they are fleeing from abusive homes, how the hell are the cops helping these kids?
Second ~ i really hope that this shelter is dealing with addiction. It is a primary cause for what holds kids, & keeps them into adulthood.
Also, i was really sickened when i read that parental consent was needed to stay in the shelter. Really, if you knew some of the stories of what these kids are running away from…Funny, though. Aren’t you opposed to parental consent for a minor having an abortion? Why assume this situation would be so different?
“First of all, the kids ( & it IS boys & girls ) see the cops as the enemy, as bad guys, because they ARE! They bust them for petty possession & prostitution. They harass them, they threaten to turn them in as runaways. When most of these kids are on the streets because they are fleeing from abusive homes, how the hell are the cops helping these kids?”
Yeah, thanks alot for bringing this up too. Cops are at the very best WORTHLESS when it comes to aiding such victims! More often, they’re just part of the problem. But these pigs (almost all men with authority/insecurity issues) are goddamned cowards – for them it’s easy to push around and run in some street kid or prostitute or someone who [other wise] has very little sway in society.
I find the cover absolutely troubling. I took a copy home last night to show friends. What the hell was the Mercury thinking? The top right pic of the guy beating a girl down at crotch level is bad…but at least it invokes the nature of the story. Still, not something I’d expect to see on the cover of the Mercury. But the larger piece underneath….I mean, really?? Is this a joke? The perpetrator is in some sort of metal god pose….I really don’t know what to think about the entire presentation. My mind ping-ponged from horror to irony to disbelief to utter confusion. Anybody else have input?
Um, why is everyone freaking out over the cover? Did yall even READ the article? Who CARES what cover they use, sheesh?
i believe that the first comment was referring to the drawing above. Not the cover of the Mercury. And, i am pretty surprised that noone else has commented on the article, as well. But, i’ve noticed that people don’t have much to say on here, unless it’s about a trivial subject or it’s pried out of them with trolling. So, troll away, Damos ๐
Well, i did read the article and i happened to think it was one of the more important ones the Merc. has published in recent years. The fact that afew other folks seemed pre-occupied by the choice of cover photo (house drawing above) struck me as bit trivial.
Oh look what I found, I didn’t even have to use any effort to dig it up. Here’s some of the contradictions shown in the limelight. >>( It’s from Savage Love comments 09-22-11.)
“That’s why sex trafficking is such a big problem here is Portland…”
But is it, really? I rode along 82nd ave. this past weekend – from NE Prescott to SE Holgate, several miles – and i didn’t see a single prostitute! I think you’re just blowing this stuff out of porportion. You see sexual deviancy everywhere, but i’m not convinced that the case.
Now you’re trying to single out the front cover of the Stranger? It’s just some girl, so what? Where is all this “sex shit” that you speak of???
Posted by DamosA on September 26, 2011 at 8:52 PM
&&&
So you allow yourself to be brain-washed by all this corporate media garbage you watch on tv, it’s no wonder you’re soo ill-informed. The sex-trafficing here in Portland is no more worse than what you’ll find in any other American city of similar size. Posted by DamosA on September 28, 2011 at 12:14 AM
&&&
Oh look what I FOUND IN THE Mercury from 2009 !? DaDaA >>> Under age sex trafficing is a fucking problem in PDX and elsewhere around the world you just don’t fucking care about children’s , women’s, people rights… http://www.portlandmercury.com/portland/coโฆ
Posted by lookup on December 25, 2011 at 11:19 PM
WOW! How obsessed are YOU strange anonymous person, to dig deep into the Merc’s archives in order to try and find some sort of contradiction (where none exist) regarding what i said?!
Why don’t you just hit me up on facebook (since you lurk my page already) and send me a friend request? That way, we can set up a date some time. Would THAT make you happen???
Never Happening.TAKEN I hate face crook.
Fine. Continue to obsess over me in silence. No skin off MY back.
Thanks #3
I also thought the Parental Consent was a weird thing
to require.
Do they think parents are even in the picture here ??
I was definitely referring to the cover photo of the actual Mercury (& not the art above). In fact, they should have used the drawing instead of perpetuating scare tactics with the picture of a man beating a woman at crotch-level. As truthful as the photo may be (I’m a social worker Helping women transition out) – I’ve seen it), I’m not sure why they also appear to glamorize the scenario. Frankly, I’m a bit disappointed that only 1 person in the comments section shares my concern.
I thought the Parental Consent thing sounded weird, too – but doesn’t it seem likely that they legally NEED parental consent before they can start sheltering a minor? It may not be their idea of a good rule, either.
@ 14 ~ i haven’t seen the cover that you were referring to. i assumed that you meant the picture above the article. Sorry.
@15 ~ Agreed. But it does show a glaring problem in how we deal with our children. A victim of incestuous rape needs parental consent for an abortion, in many states. So many of the kids out there are fleeing from that abuse. And they don’t have many safe places to turn. The mechanisms of the state turn them into criminals & unwanted wards to be shuffled around until they have had enough & flee again. And then they need their abusers permission to seek safety? It’s a broken system. And without more voices advocating for the protection of these kids, & doing what these folks are doing, so many more will fall away.