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118 lines
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Plaintext
118 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
Portland, Oregon
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Wednesday, April 6, 1994
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Neighborhood Blocks A Home For Homeless Families
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Apartment plan appeals cite
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environmental regulations
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By Julie Sterling
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This month, the Wilson Neighborhood Association will have
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spent three full years working to derail the construction
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of a 31-unit apartment building for homeless families.
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The avowed defeat of the Turning Point project, which could
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have provided short-term housing for at least 375 families since
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its might-have-opened date ( December 1991 ), seems to satisfy the
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neighbors as a just cause to pursue from their comfortable
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residences near Wilson High School.
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In fact they will toast their efforts on a winery tour of
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Yamhill County April 23. "All proceeds," says the Southwest
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Neighborhood News in its March issue, "will be used to pay for
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Wilson Neighborhood Association legal fees in our case against
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the Housing Authority of Portland." Cost of the tour is $35.
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The Turning Point, a first for Portland, would be built and
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owned by the housing authority on donated land on the west side
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of Southwest Bertha Boulevard at Chestnut Street.
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Homelessness among families with children has increased
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dramatically in recent years. Of 401 persons denied shelter
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because of lack of space one night last November, "the great
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majority...were families with children and women with children
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escaping domestic violence," wrote Chuck Currie, chairman of the
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Multnomah County Community Action Commission, in The Oregonian
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February 16 [1994].
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The Turning Point project would offer families like those
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something more than a night in a shelter or two weeks in a motel.
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It would give them a decent living environment - sleeping and
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cooking faclities in a secure two-story, landscaped building -
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while they receive counseling, job training and help in finding
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permanent housing.
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Kay Durtschi, who is president of Southwest Neighborhood
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Information Association among its 16 members, characterizes the
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dispute among its 16 members, characterizes the dispute as a
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stand-off between environmentalists and homeless advocates.
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Gerry Newhall chairman of the Friends of Turning Point, disagrees:
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It's a NIMBY ( Not in My Back Yard ) issue. The Wilson Neighborhood
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Associatlon, she contends, underwent an "environmental conversion"
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in the early stages of the dispute when it became clear that
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fighting the case on a NIMBY platform would not be politically or
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socially acceptable.
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The May 1991 issue of Southwest Neighborhood News, reporting on
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an April 4 meeting of the Wilson group, said residents at the early
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meeting "questioned why such a project was being considered for a
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largely middle and upper-middle-class neighborhood ... They
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expressed fears about increased crime and lowered property values,"
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A letter to the editor in the Oregonian April 20, 1991, quoted one
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of the Wilson group as saying, "Why are people of lesser means
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brought in here, just to see what they can't have?"
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Early on, the housing authority successfully countered
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NIMBY arguments with assurances that the facility would have
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24-hour, on-site management and an average residency of 60 days.
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But since then, the Wilson neighbors have tossed so many
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environmental grenades at the housing authority that the agency
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must be tempted to build a bunker on the thorny site instead of
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housing.
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There's no question that the site is environmentally sensitive.
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Part of it is an easement for storm water detention and part is
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a wetland. A small creek runs through its layers of brambles.
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And there's no doubt that the neighbor's environmental strategy
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has reaped delays and heaped legal fees on lawyers for both sides.
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But the housing authority argues that every objection raised is
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satisfied in a series of conditions it has accepted, including an
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argument to build outside the wetland. As to questions of runoff
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disposal, the Turning Point development would not change the
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overall capicity of the storm-water detention area, according to
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city findings.
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If anything, the Turning Point project would enhance the
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neighborhood. The housing authority would dedicate 72 percent of
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the site - the part that will remain untouched - for a park.
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The proposal has survived a minefield of appeals - from the
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City Council to the state Land Use Board of Appeals, to the Oregon
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Court of Appeals to the Oregon Supreme Court - so the housing
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authority had every reason to celebrate October 1, [1993] when the
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City Council approved the Turning Point site for conditional use.
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But in early February, the Wilson group filed its fifth appeal.
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Now the neighborhood challenges the evidence the city and the
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housing authority gathered to substantiate three issues singled
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out by the Land Use Board of Appeals for further council review.
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Chairman Wesley Risher says the Wilson Neighborhood Association
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is prepared to go to the federal level in its effort to make sure
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that the Turning Point "is built in accordance with federal
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requirements and mandates, because it is receiving federal funding."
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He believes it does not meet standards set by the National
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Historical Preservation Act, the Clean Water Act, the Americans
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With Disabilities and the National Environmental Policy Act.
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He could well cite one more well-known act: The Turning Point
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project was a bright hope for homeless families three years ago;
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today it is an endangered species.
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- end -
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