Public comment at city council meetings has recently centered on one topic: criminalizing Portlandâs homeless population.
One group thatâs been especially vocal? The âMontavilla Initiative,â a conservative spinoff of the Montavilla Neighborhood Association.
Montavilla Initiative members have vilified the police bureau for not responding to low-level crimes they say have been committed by homeless people in their steadily gentrifying East Portland neighborhood. The group also recently filmed individuals who were entering a syringe exchange site and domestic violence shelter, with the stated aim of documenting their âbad behaviorâ to share with police.
To sell others on this narrative, the group has perpetuated a familiar, but dangerous, myth: That most homeless people donât want to be helped.
In an interview with right-wing radio host Lars Larson, Montavilla Initiative Chair Angela Todd claimed that sheâs spoken with hundreds of homeless people who are âservice resistantââmeaning they choose to be homeless, take drugs, and commit crimes, even when offered alternatives.
The idea makes Leo Rhodes laugh.
âThatâs crazy to me,â says Rhodes, a Street Roots vendor who experienced homelessness in both Seattle and Portland. âAbsolutely no one I know enjoys being homeless. Itâs offensive.â
Liora Berry, the head of Cascadia Behavioral Health Careâs street outreach team, says itâs âreally, really uncommonâ to encounter homeless individuals who reject help.
But she can see how outsiders can jump to conclusions.
âThe experience of not having a place to call home is an idea thatâs so hard to wrap your head around unless youâve lived it,â Berry says.
There are many reasons individuals might seem âresistantâ to services, Berry adds. Perhaps they were previously promised housing, health care, or addiction treatment, only to have it fall through. Perhaps theyâve been scammed by a seemingly friendly stranger too many times.
âPeople donât want to get their hopes up unless they can trust you,â says Berry. It sometimes takes outreach teams months of visiting a homeless encampment before earning enough trust to help transition its occupants off the streets.
Perhaps they were sexually assaulted the last time they slept at a shelter. Perhaps their possessions were stolen the last time they left to seek housing assistance. Perhaps theyâre hesitant to accept help before others who are worse off.
These explanations arenât as tidy or convenient as simply being âservice resistant.â But the label certainly makes it easier to blame individuals for systemic failures.
âCalling people âservice resistantâ helps distance us from responsibility,â says Marc Jolin, director of the county and city's Joint Office of Homeless Services (JOHS). âIf someone says theyâre not interested in services, it doesnât mean they want to be homeless. It should make us ask, âAre we offering the right services?ââ
Portlandâs service providers have begun to tweak their models to meet the populationâs needs. Transition Projects now allows guests to bring their dogs inside their shelters and allows couples to sleep in the same area. Peer-run villages like Right 2 Dream Too, Hazelnut Grove, and the Kenton Women's Village have expanded, often with public support for their success at transitioning folks into permanent housing. And JOHS has funneled dollars into programs that help newly housed people find stability, while Metro pushes for a housing bond that would expand this model across the region.
These incremental solutions show proven successâunlike the reactionary arrests that groups like Montavilla Initiative are clamoring for. Which begs the question: Which population is truly resistant to our regionâs services?