SISTERS OF THE ROAD, a nonprofit that works with the
homeless, resigned from the mayor’s Street Access for Everyone (SAFE)
oversight committee last week, vowing instead to devote its time to
advocating for the repeal of the city’s controversial sit-lie and
anti-camping laws. The sit-lie law emerged from the SAFE committee, but
Sisters isn’t happy with how it’s been enforced.

“The SAFE resolution effectively criminalized people who are
experiencing homelessness and have nowhere to rest during the day,”
said Sisters’ Associate Director Michael Buonocore, at a press
conference held on the steps of city hall on Thursday, May 8, adding
that it is now “effectively illegal to be homeless in Portland.”

Buonocore said Sisters was assured that the sit-lie ordinance would
not target homeless individuals, but that “it has been shown to do
exactly that.” Seventy-nine of the 88 warnings or citations issued
between August 2007 and January 2008 under the sit-lie ordinance have
been given to homeless people. Meanwhile, the services promised to
accompany the ordinanceโ€”like public restroomsโ€””have been
inadequately implemented,” Buonocore says.

Sisters has been part of the SAFE committee since its inception in
2006. The committee is due to present back to city council in August,
but it will now be more difficult for pro-sit-lie advocates to claim
that the committee represents a cross-section of the community, and
that the sit-lie ordinance should therefore be continued.

Sisters’ civic action group, coordinated by Patrick Nolen, will now
work on an advocacy campaign, encouraging people to contact their
elected officials demanding the repeal of the controversial laws.

“I am really disappointed in their decision,” says Mike Kuykendall
of the Portland Business Alliance, the SAFE committee’s co-chair. “The
SAFE committee has been working withย Sisters of the Roadย in
good faith for more than two years on how to make downtown more livable
for everyone. We’ve made so much progress during that time, including
funding day shelters, public restrooms, and benches for the Central
City. We will continue pushing for more of these types of services, and
I wish they would have chosen to continue being a part of this
effort.”

Matt Davis was news editor of the Mercury from 2009 to May 2010.