Ending Displacement Requires A Movement

by

Councilmember Kshama Sawant, Seattle City Council

Councilmember Kirsten Harris-Talley, Seattle City Council

Nick Licata, former Seattle City Councilmember

Nikkita Oliver, community organizer, writer, educator, attorney

Katie Wilson, General Secretary, Transit Riders Union

Tim Harris, Founding Director, Real Change

Tiffani McCoy, Lead Organizer, Real Change

Paula Lukaszek, President, WFSE 1488

David Parsons, President, UAW 4121

Jill Mangaliman, Executive Director, Got Green!

Matt Remle, Cofounder, Mazaska Talks

 

Esther “Little Dove” John is about to get pushed out of her home.

A developer has bought the 4-unit apartment complex on Beacon Hill that John lives in. The building will be replaced by a new one, with 44 separate 220-square-foot micro-apartments, not livable for John or other families or seniors.

Unless we organize a movement to stop this displacement, John, a community activist, artist, and retired psychology professor, will be forced out of the neighborhood she’s lived in since 2005.

We all have friends and neighbors like John who have been displaced from Seattle – pushed by rising rents to the suburbs or entirely out of the region. Yet others are increasingly forced into living on friends’ couches, in shelters, or on the streets.

Homelessness has spiraled out of control. This is not the Seattle we aspire to be.

Two years ago, on November 2, former Mayor Ed Murray proclaimed a state of civil emergency to address the homelessness crisis in Seattle, declaring that to forestall dramatic action “would be in dereliction…of the welfare and basic human rights of the people.”

Two years into the emergency declaration, things have only gotten worse.

More than 8,500 Seattleites don’t have a home to sleep in. Zillow recently pointed out that in Seattle, every 5 percent rent increase pushes an additional 258 people into homelessness. The percentage of homeless students in Seattle Public Schools has doubled in the past five years to 7 percent of all students, and at Capitol Hill’s Lowell Elementary, 20 percent of the students are homeless. And homelessness disproportionately harms people of color, who account for nearly three-quarters of all homeless families with children in King County.

The average working family can forget about the dream of homeownership as an escape from the rental market. A Seattle schoolteacher with a Master’s degree and five years’ of experience would need to save money for 15 years before being able to afford a typical Seattle home down payment.

Instead of investing in affordable housing at the scale the crisis demands, elected officials have instead prioritized “sweeps,” moving unauthorized homeless encampments from one location to another.

The policy of sweeping people from unauthorized encampments is ineffective, a waste of the City’s resources, and inhumane. Last year alone, there were 601 sweeps, – an alarming increase from previous years – moving an estimated 135 encampments around the city. Yet, as we move into the rainy season, we still find most of these individuals on the street, without permanent housing and in a precarious living situation.

Sweeps disrupt the meager stability people living in tents and cars can attain, and too often cause the loss of belongings, while solving none of the underlying problems. In short, sweeps cost us millions and do nothing to alleviate homelessness.

We can’t continue with lip service. It doesn’t have to be this way. And this fall, the City must back the 2015 emergency proclamation with meaningful action.

The new mayor, Tim Burgess, has proposed a budget that provides incremental improvements, but no substantial funding increases for services or affordable housing. Furthermore, it continues the inhumane sweeps. Adopting such a budget will in no way advance the City’s emergency declaration on homelessness.

We need a budget that stops the sweeps, and instead uses the millions of dollars to fund services, sanitation and healthcare for people living in expanded encampments. Such an approach will still allow the City to ensure locations such as school property, active rights-of-way including sidewalks and stairways, and activated parks are clear.

We also need a budget that greatly expands publicly-funded affordable housing construction through a progressive tax on big businesses like Amazon, which are thriving and need to step up and contribute their share in addressing the crisis.

There’s a public hearing on the City’s 2018 budget on Wednesday, Nov. 1, at 4pm, and we hope you will join us there, and speak up to stop the sweeps and fund services and housing through a modest progressive business tax that exempts 90 percent of the smallest businesses.

But we need to do more. That’s why, following the public hearing, community members are committed to stay in City Hall till late into the evening. Many will occupy it overnight until the morning of Nov. 2, the two year anniversary of the emergency declaration. Since homeless people are forced to camp outside, we will conduct a peaceful camp-in to bring focus to the city’s crisis. We’ll share music and food, and have conversations and teach-ins.

Please join us and help create a city that is truly welcoming to all.


Featured image by Will Sweger

emerald-donation-post-footers-help-us-grow

 

9 thoughts on “Ending Displacement Requires A Movement”

  1. EndingDisplacement article is a bad connection. I Could not finish reading.

    Adele Reynolds 206-621-4867

    1. This opinion piece is devastatingly naive. To go from talking about the average working family and a school teacher with a master’s degree, to a blanket statement about sweeps being inhumane and a poor use of resources — what a tunnel vision view that completely disregards the drug epidemic, our broken mental health system, and the fact that we are housing traumatized people in mud and shrubs, without mitigating impacts to communities and our environment.

      “More harm than good” is a painful concept when applied to the social revolution being attempted in Seattle while the actual work of meaningful governance and follow-through is left by the wayside. What an embarrassment to all the authors listed that this is your take on ending displacement. Please listen to the constructive criticism that so many citizens are attempting to voice. It’s time to be pragmatic and holistic, to move forward collaboratively as a community, and to recognize and mitigate the very real collateral damage of so many colliding issues.

      Enjoy the music and food on Wednesday night, but please stop shying away from the assaults, rapes, preventable deaths, human trafficking, property crime and environmental devastation that are begging for leadership right alongside the weighty topic of economic displacement.

  2. “More than 8500 Seattleites don’t have a home to sleep in”. Where did this number come from? It’s way more than the number of unsheltered people as reported from the January 2017 One Night Count that covered the whole county. Oh, and they took down affordable houses in Ballard and put up micro apartments. It is happening everywhere. Why would any neighborhood be exempt?

    1. And? So does that mean people shouldn’t be concerned that it’s happening in their neighborhood?

      1. Also, the one-night count consistently undercounts the number of unhoused people. The County itself has said this.

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