The plot at SE Woodstock and 93rd, where the camp will sit. Credit: PortlandMaps.com
The plot at SE Woodstock and 93rd, where the camp will sit.
The plot at SE Woodstock and 93rd, where the camp will sit. PortlandMaps.com

There’s a brand new organized homeless camp in the city that fits plenty of Mayor Charlie Hales’ priorities for getting people into safe space.

The camp, being built today near SE 93rd and Woodstock, is designed to be a haven for homeless women subjected to frequent sexual assault on the streets—a segment officials have rightly prioritized for emergency shelter recently. It’s connected to a nonprofit; an organization called Advocacy 5 that’s helping pay for security and facilities. And the camp plans to use a mixture of tents and community spaces, portable toilets, and dumpsters—similar to a vision for “communal villages” the city’s communicated recently.

One thing the new camp doesn’t have in common with the city’s vision? It’s going up without any official permission—on public land, in a part of the city officials are desperate to redevelop. It’s on a plot owned by the Portland Development Commission in the Lents neighborhood.

“We cannot, as an agency of conscience that sees this population almost daily, wait anymore for the City of Portland to take action,” reads a message Advocacy 5 wrote to Lents neighbors. “There are women being violated in the most heinous of ways, everyday.”

In the note [PDF], Advocacy 5’s president and CEO Lisa Lake describes the organization as “the fiscal agent for several small grassroots agencies” that work with the homeless, including the group Boots on the Ground PDX, which has been doing outreach work near the Springwater Corridor trail.

“We are treating this as an emergency [domestic violence] shelter in order to protect women from ongoing assaults,” Lake writes. “Is there anyone among us who does not want to keep these women safe?”

If the camp’s roll out is a surprise to some neighbors, it won’t be to the city. Lake tells the Mercury there have been talks about setting up campers on the land for months, but that the city recently announced to advocates, with no reason offered, that it wasn’t a viable property for campers.

Nonetheless, Lake says her group submitted plans to the city for a camp a couple weeks ago, announcing it would be setting people up on the site—permission or no. Officials never responded.

The relatively long history of this project means Advocacy 5 has laid a lot of groundwork for the camp. It has tents, and is building platforms this afternoon to put them on. It’s also reached out to Portland mayoral candidate Sarah Iannarone, who Lake says has helped connect the group with volunteers.

“She’s here with a hammer right now,” Lake said today. “She’s been there, she’s met with us.”

Five women will live in the camp initially, along with homeless advocate Trena Sutton, who’ll act as a “live-in host.” That number will grow over time, under the group’s plans. Advocacy 5 has ordered two large, cloth quonset-hut-style structures from the National Guard that will serve as communal space, Lake says. They’ll arrive shortly (they’re being shipped from Louisiana). There’s a plan for the layout of the camp, too.

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Perhaps most crucially, Advocacy 5 has funding. Lake says she’s secured monthly recurring donations of around $2,600, and is contracting with social services providers for meals and hiring private security at night.

“We do not see this as a long-term landing spot,” Lake writes in her letter. “We are hoping this spurs the City of Portland to start making serious plans regarding our houseless community—the most vulnerable first.”

This isn’t the first time a group’s set up on city land without permission. In January, a camp calling itself Forgotten Realms surprised officials when it set up on a plot at North Kerby and Graham. Hales’ office first announced the campers would have to find somewhere else to go, then changed its mind. But it warned, at the time, that anyone trying a similar strategy in the future would likely be unsuccessful.

“We didn’t do this subversively, but we’re doing it for the women,” says Lake, who acknowledges she’s unsure how city officials will react. “It should be an interesting week, this week.”

The PDC hasn’t responded to a message seeking comment. Hales’ office promised us a response tomorrow. In the meantime, here’s what the new camp—tentatively called Hope Forward (a play on local housing authority Home Forward)—looks like right now.

Update, Monday 1:40 pm: According to the PDC, this property might not be public for long. In March, the agency received two offers to purchase the 0.38-acre plot, after years of failing to attract interest. The winning bid? A $500,000 proposal to build a food cart pod and market rate apartments on the land, from Clackamas-based Lisac Brothers Construction. The development commission will vote Wednesday on whether to pursue that proposal.

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I'm a news reporter for the Mercury. I've spent a lot of the last decade in journalism — covering tragedy and chicanery in the hills of southwest Missouri, politics in Washington, D.C., and other matters...

13 replies on “A New Camp For Homeless Women Is Going Up On Public Land—And Not Waiting For Permission”

  1. At some point one of these firetraps is going to burn to the ground killing a bunch of these bums and if the city keeps allowing them on city land they are going to get sued.

  2. @dave we have fire codes for a reason. There have been a rash of fires in homeless camps this year and the fire department is saying that most of them have been started intentionally by the people in the camps. They are a disaster waiting to happen, fire, close quarters, nylon tents, and drug and alcohol abuse don’t mix well.

  3. Even in biblical times there were street people, prostitutes and beggars the only one who succeeded in getting rid of them was Hitler. How we treat these people will define us.

  4. @econoline People like you are what’s wrong with this country. Do you feel no compassion for your fellow man? You’re parents clearly failed you. : /

  5. Who knew that the right way to feel compassion for people was to encourage them to live in a way that will probably lead to them dying in a horrible fire, good to know. These tent cities are as much a danger to them as the surrounding communities.

  6. Interesting that a Mayoral candidiate would act without authority and also cooperate with the
    serial-disrupter Sarah Long. Not that Mayor Iannarone will happen, but would she ignore
    all Portland’s ordinances etc. every time something doesn’t go her way? Ianaarone is obvioulsy desperate and is making a fool of herself. Cf. her assertions that she will, as Mayor, overrrule state laws against rent control.

  7. Interesting that the focus is on building a shelter and not catching the filth that’s perpetrating the crimes against these women. If they’re being perpetually violated, maybe the police could try that age old technique known as surveillance?

    And for those of you bashing econoline, please know that your little comments about compassion serve only to make yourselves feel better and do nothing for the people you appear to be so concerned about. We’ll see how quickly that compassion fades when these camps are in your backyard.

  8. As in post-Katrina New Orleans, when the government fails people of conscience step up. 80% of all emergency aid comes from friends, family & strangers, not insurance companies or government agencies. I applaud this effort.
    #Solidarity

  9. I was a victim of a kidnapping and Gang rape in Los Angeles in 2001. I was Homeless. After I went thru the rape kit, and dealt with the police, they dumped me on Skid row.
    The shelter was full, but a kind social worker took me to her home and helped me get back on my feet.
    I cannot for one minute fathom how awful it is to be treated so poorly by the City of Portland when your a survivor of Rape.
    All the rotten comments make my stomach turn.
    What if it was your mom, your daughter, or a friend who was just trying to find a safe place to lay there head.
    Just being raped is horrific in itself, let alone desperately trying to feel safe. I am publicly stating right now that I am truly ashamed of how these women are being treated. I would like to help in anyway I can. I live two hours away from Portland, but would like to offer any assistance I can.
    I hope and pray none of you complainers ever end up in a situation such as these brave rape victims.

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