Saturday, March 19, 2016

Camp Hayden Quietly Moved On

Revised: December 2018

By Sarah Owens and Michael Livingston


A couple of weeks ago, Sgt. Jason Van Meter of SPD's Downtown Enforcement Team let the community know that K&D Sand and Gravel had asked SPD for assistance removing the large, illegal camp where Edgewater Street merges with Highway 22, known to many as the Capital Manor camp, and to its residents as Camp Hayden, or the camp on the ridge. He explained:

I don't want to go into the camp today and make dozens of arrests.  The Police Department will post the camp as an illegal homeless camp on Tuesday March 8th at 0900.  I would like social services and homeless advocates with us to assist finding people temporary and permanent housing.  (We are already getting the word out to the people in the camp.)  We will repost the camp on Tuesday, March 15th at 0900. 
On Wednesday March 16th, at 10:00 AM those remaining...will be subject to arrest, however again I would rather get them a bed some place other that the Polk County Jail...Would people be willing to assist officers on March 8th and 15th with notifications and offering people housing and services?  Where is bed space available on the 16th? I would like to have alternatives for the homeless, other than arrest, and what are those?

We forwarded the request for assistance to the Emergency Housing Network, a collaborative of shelter providers coordinated by the Salem Housing Authority, sparking questions about numbers and concerns about the capacity of providers to accommodate a sudden influx of people seeking services, as well as offers of assistance.

On the morning of March 8, officers met with representatives from the Salem Housing Authority, the Salvation Army, Union Gospel Mission, the Mid-Willamette Valley Community Action Agency and others, where the trail along Edgewater passes under Highway 22.  

From there, they headed west along the trail about 50 yards to the edge of a camp with 10 to 15 active sites.

Most of the 15 to 20 campers they spoke with were already aware they were being asked to move on.  Many were willing to talk with the outreach workers about services.  Most were aware of the services that were available, but some were not.  

After leaving Camp Hayden, the group went to an ODOT property on the south end of Wallace Marine Park, where they spoke with 8 to 10 campers, including a 24 year-old woman who had recently quit her job to take care of her mother, who was suffering from a terminal illness.  After her mother died, the woman was forced out of her home and on to the streets, where she had been since February.  A member of the Salem Housing Authority staff took the woman to her office, gave her food and arranged for housing and other services. 

No arrests were made at either camp that day.  All campers the group spoke with were friendly, even appreciative.

On March 15, SPD returned to Camp Hayden with outreach workers, where they found only ten or so campers remaining.  The next morning, there were only three, and, as they were packing to leave, they were not arrested.

The cooperative outreach effort had been successful by any reasonable measurement -- no arrests, a couple of people enrolled in the Oregon Health Plan, several people moved into housing or a shelter and offered services, and the remainder quietly shifted off of private property onto public property.  But, we wondered, will such cooperation be enough in the years ahead? 

On March 18, we went to see whether anyone had moved back to Camp Hayden, despite the owner having given SPD something called a "trespass letter of consent" or TLC, which allows SPD to arrest campers on sight.  We saw no one.

What we did see were more than 20 shopping carts, many, many bicycle parts, camps set off along the right side of the trail, over the embankment, one with carpeted steps carved from the soil.

We saw muddy trails winding away toward the river to other camps, and everywhere torn, sodden and broken things: strollers, pallets, grills, coolers, buckets, crates, cooking utensils, sleeping bags, blankets, clothing, suitcases, water bottles, a surprising number of mattresses, headboards, shovels, chairs, lawn chairs, tarps, rope, carpet, tires, and wheelbarrows.

As we made our way back along the trail, we met
a young woman with short red hair, who was very pregnant, walking west toward the camp.  She was wearing a backpack; her ruddy complexion bespeaking a life spent outdoors.

We asked if she lived at the camp up the trail.

She said no, she just crosses through it.  She lived with her fiance and sister in another camp.  Yes, she knew the people in the camp.  They'd either moved to Wallace Marine Park or the Quarry Camp (partly in WMP).  Some were still moving, but a lot of stuff they'd just abandoned, like the sleeping bag draped over the guardrail over there, and the purple jacket she was wearing.

She told us her baby boy was due any day now, and her sister was just as far along.  She had found out she was pregnant at 37 weeks, but had been taking her prenatal vitamins since then.  She had cash assistance and food stamps, and didn't seem interested in other services.  This was her fourth child.

1 comment:

  1. From the public FB page of Jennifer Reames Sowers:
    "So glad to be a part of this - your Salem Police officers are engaging the community in caring and trauma-informed ways. There is a huge network of community resources who work together to "wrap around" and meet needs."

    "This morning our team had the opportunity to join the Salem Police Department and six other service providers at an encampment in West Salem where dozens of our neighbors experiencing homelessness reside. Due to changing circumstances, these individuals are being asked to leave this property. Our staff was impressed with the care and dignity in which the police pursued this task, inviting the service providers to offer services for two weeks before cleaning out the camp.

    Jason Ramos, our Family Services Manager, was particularly impacted by the responses of the campers, many of whom expressed gratitude at being offered services and one couple who said that no one had ever stepped into "their world" to explain how they could help.

    Since last week we have had 4 of these campers come in for assessments to enter the Lighthouse Shelter. We are proud to be a partner among many working towards ending homelessness in our city!"

    ReplyDelete