Hope a good number of us can be at the candidate forum Monday night to ask Councilman Blocker whether he condones the sweep of J St after agreeing to a stay on enforcement of his code change. This really makes me angry. Forum is free with registration. 

The Hilltop Candidate Debate featuring District 3 Candidates Tickets, Mon, Oct 21, 2019 at 5:00 PM | Eventbrite
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-hilltop-candidate-debate-featuring-district-3-candidates-tickets-74881335089

In joyous solidarity, 
Peach McDouall 


On Sat, Oct 19, 2019, 17:28 Communication forum for the Tacoma Pierce County Coalition to End Homelessness <nobody@simplelists.com> wrote:
(Previous discussion continued)
Fwd: TTOC Condemns City's Cruel Sweep of Tents Today in Rain - Maureen Howard (19 Oct 2019 03:57 UTC)

Fwd: TTOC Condemns City's Cruel Sweep of Tents Today in Rain by Maureen Howard (19 Oct 2019 03:57 UTC)
Reply to list

    Colleagues,
    Thanks to our allies with Tacoma Tenants Organizing Committee.  The video is on their Facebook page.
    Msureen

    ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    From: Tacoma Tenants Organizing Committee via ActionNetwork.org <info@sg.actionnetwork.org>
    Date: Fri, Oct 18, 2019, 8:51 PM
    Subject: TTOC Condemns City's Cruel Sweep of Tents Today in Rain
    Tell the Mayor and City Council to Stop Criminalizing Survival

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Tacoma Tenants Organizing Committee

    October 18, 2019

    Tacoma Tenants Organizing Committee Condemns the City of Tacoma’s Sweep of a Tent Encampment in the Cold and Rain

    In the wake of an inhumane ban on camping in public parks, the Tacoma Police swept an encampment at 11th St. and J St. on the Hilltop.

    Tacoma, WA — Today, in the cold and rain, the Tacoma Police Department swept an encampment of approximately 30 people at 11th St. and J. St. in the Hilltop Neighborhood. The police verbally claimed they posted 72 hour’s notice, but the residents of the encampment said they received no notice. The only notice they received, in fact, was their homes coming down upon them as the police dismantled their tents, taking their valuable belongings into white vans to be picked up at the Stability Site and leaving everything else to be picked up later as trash. Police told a TTOC Organizer that Councilmember Keith Blocker had authorized the sweep.

    Why today? It was a choice to carry out this sweep today on one of the coldest, rainiest days that we’ve had this season. Instead of choosing a dry day, this caused additional chaos for our unhoused community members to find a new place to stay tonight and also completely soaked all of their personal belongings.

    This inhumane action comes in the wake of the City Council’s vote to ban camping in public parks, due to go into effect on December 1, 2019. The city has mismanaged the homelessness crisis for decades, choosing to criminalize poverty and homelessness and enact band-aid emergency measures instead of long-term solutions to house all residents.

    One clear example of this was in 2017 when the City of Tacoma declared a State of Public Health Emergency over Homelessness. The City of Tacoma responded with a Three-Phased Emergency Temporary Aid and Shelter Plan, which included the Stability Site that we see today. What is often left out of the story is the “Unlawful Camping” law (TMC.8.12.180) first approved in July 2017 saying that, “It is unlawful for any person to camp upon any public property in the City of Tacoma.” This criminalization of homelessness violates the civil and human rights of our unsheltered neighbors, costs taxpayers money, and is ultimately an ineffective method of addressing underlying causes of homelessness, as written in the 2019 report “No Safe Place” by the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty. The sweep today on J Street could not have happened without this unjust camping ban in place.

    During the 2019 Point in Time Count in Pierce County, 629 people were counted as unsheltered and 857 people were counted in either shelters or transitional housing. Our current shelter capacity in Pierce County is completely insufficient. We also know that the Point in Time survey may under-represent the true number of people experiencing homelessness.

    Are we going to continue to criminalize homelessness and cause life-altering, traumatic sweeps, rather than working to truly solve the housing and public health crisis in our region? Winter is coming. Where are people going to go?

    We call on the City of Tacoma to:

    1. Delay the implementation of the Metro Parks tent ban only until the city has adequate designated day and night shelter.

    2. Decline to renew TMC 8.12.180 (ie “Unlawful Camping) set to expire December 31, 2019.

    3. Follow in the footsteps of the City of Austin, TX to overturn the public camping ban, allowing police to only sweep campsites (i.e., unhoused people’s homes) if they present a public health or safety hazard or are blocking a walkway.

    4. Invest in more creative emergency shelters; utilizing public land for safe and sanitary encampments and creating facilities, like Urban Rest Stop, where people experiencing homelessness have access to restrooms, showers and laundry services.

    5. Immediately pass tenant protections to keep more people in their homes, as recommended by the City’s Affordable Housing Action Strategy, with an ordinance for Just Cause protections to prevent arbitrary terminations of tenancy, and supporting the statewide fight for Rent Control.  

    6. Stop giving luxury developers tax breaks and focus on building more public housing for low-income and working people.

    TAKE ACTION NOW
    Call Mayor Woodards and the City Council: 253-591-5125 and tell them to Stop Criminalizing Survival! #FundHousing #ShelterIsAHumanRight #WinterIsComing

    MORE ABOUT TACOMA TENANTS ORGANIZING COMMITTEE (TTOC)

    Tacoma Tenants Organizing Committee (TTOC) was formed in the wake of the mass eviction at the Tiki Apartments last year. Our struggle began at the Tiki Apartments when over 100 low-income tenants were given 20 day notices to leave the premises by an out of town developer. Since that eviction, many of the former Tiki residents have become homeless and three have died. TTOC has won significant victories for tenants’ rights, but the fight continues. Many people are one lost paycheck or medical emergency away from homelessness. Housing is a human right and we are all in the fight together.

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