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Shelter workers and providers urge Portland to preserve 24-hour and alternative shelters, warn of job losses
Summary
Union-represented shelter workers and shelter operators told the Homelessness and Housing Committee that moving away from 24-hour and alternative shelter models risks worse outcomes for people experiencing homelessness and could cost dozens of jobs as funding shifts.
Shelter staff, union leaders and operators told the Portland Homelessness and Housing Committee on April 8 that recent shifts in shelter funding and planning risk dismantling 24-hour shelters and alternative programs that staff say are more effective for many people experiencing homelessness.
The testimony came from front-line workers and service providers during a scheduled panel to give the committee “perspectives from shelter providers.” Speakers included Jay Nicholson, a case manager and union steward with AFSCME Local 1790; Misha Litvak, vice president of AFSCME Local 1790; shelter resident and Hazelnut Grove villager Barbara Webber; Tyler Fellini, executive director of Portland Jobs for Justice; and Michael Anderson of the Sideline Institute.
Why it matters: Panelists said the city’s proposed pivot toward an overnight congregate “line-and-day-center” model — where people wait in line each night for a bed, put belongings into daytime storage and return each evening to rejoin the queue — will worsen access for people with disabilities, reduce continuity of care and shrink engagement that leads to housing exits.
“My name is Jay Nicholson. I’m a case…
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