Homelessness cited as grounds for Olympia to extend its public health emergency declaration

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The Olympia City Council declared a continuing public health emergency, claiming that homelessness continues to present significant public health and safety issues for the entire community.

The ordinance, unanimously approved by the councilmembers on Tuesday, April 18, authorized city staff to take reasonable and necessary actions to mitigate the conditions that cause the public health emergency.

Rich Hoey, assistant city manager, asked the city council to extend the ordinance, initially adopted in July 2018, for an additional six months.

Hoey stating that the number of houseless persons and tents within the city dramatically increased since August 2018.

He enumerated concerns about public health and safety, sanitation, welfare, mental and physical health, and environmental degradation due to encampments.

"The above circumstances are and continue to present significant public health and safety issues for the entire community,” Rich said, “and necessitate further urgent actions to mitigate the conditions giving rise to this threat to public health and safety.”

"The above circumstances are and continue to present significant public health and safety issues for the entire community and necessitate further urgent actions to mitigate the conditions giving rise to this public health and safety threat," the ordinance stated.

The Olympia City Council approved an ordinance declaring a continuing public health emergency on Tuesday, April 18, 2023.
The Olympia City Council approved an ordinance declaring a continuing public health emergency on Tuesday, April 18, 2023.

Mitigation

Hoey claimed the city made substantial investments and efforts in homeless response outreach, public health sanitation support, encampments in the community, emergency shelter housing, affordable housing, renter protections, and more. "All that aimed at helping us address the public health emergency in our community."

This week the city's homeless response team helped to coordinate an extensive cleanup of garbage and waste at the encampment at Sleater Kinney and I-5, Hoey told the council.

He added that the city worked with regional partners for emergency shelter housing for those residing on Sleater Kinney and Wheeler Avenue. He mentioned the former Days Inn, a 120-unit hotel in Lacey that is being converted into an enhanced shelter. "The work is underway now."

The city will begin constructing a 50-unit tiny home village on Franz Anderson Road.

"Once those projects are ready in late spring and summer, we will be able to offer housing to those residing within those encampment areas," the city assistant manager announced.

Hoey said the State of Washington Department of Transportation would close the freeway encampment areas when they transitioned people to housing.

Comments

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  • AugieH

    I suspect homelessness and the homeless to become permanent fixtures as the latter will migrate to the area when it becomes common knowledge that the city will provide housing. So, too, the public health emergency.

    Friday, April 21, 2023 Report this

  • JW

    The amount of money expended on the transient population has skyrocketed, yet the problem continues to get worse and worse.

    Why does the city pat itself on the back for cleaning up the Sleater/I-5 camp?

    They cleaned up the unsanctioned camping site across from the Intercity transit center several years ago and commended themselves.

    Those people moved to Deschutes which they again cleaned up at great expense and commended themselves.

    Those people moved to Ensign road where they AGAIN cleaned up at great expense and commended themselves.

    Those people have moved to Hobby Lobby and the on ramp camp on Sleater Kinney and yet again the city is expending money on cleanup and commending themselves.

    When you raise your kid cleaning up their messes for their entire lives and enabling it you are called a bad parent, but when a city does it for a bunch of illegal campers and drug addicts it's the right thing to do?

    Friday, April 21, 2023 Report this

  • Scooter

    Apparently the "homeless " have no respect for others property and living off the grid sans rules has become the norm. Now that is no doubt a generalizing but give me a break... they can't/won't even collect their garbage...not even attempt to keep their camps neat and clean???

    Saturday, April 22, 2023 Report this