Sign In  |  Register  |  About Menlo Park  |  Contact Us

Menlo Park, CA
September 01, 2020 1:28pm
7-Day Forecast | Traffic
  • Search Hotels in Menlo Park

  • CHECK-IN:
  • CHECK-OUT:
  • ROOMS:

Portland faces lawsuit from disabled residents over taxpayer-funded homeless tent crisis

A lawsuit on behalf of Portland residents with disabilities has been filed against the city due to the number of homeless encampments funded by taxpayers.

Nearly three years after the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the city of Portland, Oregon continues to have one of the nation’s most visible homeless problems as thousands of tents and tarps remain set up across the city in unsanctioned encampments. But now a lawsuit filed on behalf of Portland residents with disabilities has uncovered the source of perhaps the vast majority of those tents—taxpayers.

John DiLorenzo, who represents the plaintiffs in an Americans with Disabilities Act lawsuit against Portland, said, "The taxpayers are paying the county to put tents in place, which the city is in turn charging the taxpayers to sweep up." 

"It’s sort of like trying to walk up the down escalator," he added.

During the discovery phase of the lawsuit, DiLorenzo says he learned Multnomah County’s Joint Office of Homeless Services (JOHS) paid $2 million for 22,000 new tents and 70,000 tarps. It was also revealed that JOHS had virtually no accounting for who eventually received the tents or where they were set up. 

IDAHO GOVERNOR WINS LAWSUIT AGAINST ILLEGAL ENCAMPMENT OUTSIDE CAPITOL: 'WE ARE NOT PORTLAND'

"You provide them (homeless individuals) 22,000 tents and tarps over a couple years, we believe the likelihood is quite high that most of those tents and tarps are what ended up on the sidewalks, streets and in the parks," DiLorenzo said.

The lawsuit seeks to require the City of Portland to remove all the encampments that currently block public sidewalks and parks. It claims Portland is in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act by allowing tents and tarps to impede those people using wheelchairs, walkers or canes to get around.

Denis Theriault is the spokesperson for JOHS. In a statement he tells Fox News, "Outreach workers generally tell people to sleep where it’s legal and safe to do so, to avoid being swept. And they offer information…on where folks aren’t allowed to be. But they can’t ultimately control where folks set up."

PORTLAND WOMAN FRUSTRATED BY HOMELESS CRISIS SAYS MAYOR LAUGHED OFF COMPLAINT: 'I DON'T THINK THIS IS FUNNY'

Taxpayers are getting hit on both ends of the tent crisis. They paid for the cost of purchasing the tents and tarps and now they are paying for the cost of removing them. And the price of cleaning an unsanctioned camp is steep as used needles and biohazards are usually left behind. Portland recently increased its contract with Rapid Response Bio Cleaning to $26.6 million over four years.

Mayor Ted Wheeler’s spokesman, Cody Bowman said the cost is justified. "We have 800 self-sited unsanctioned campsites across 146 miles of Portland," Bowman says, "This is a public health emergency."

Stock Quote API & Stock News API supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.
 
 
Copyright © 2010-2020 MenloPark.com & California Media Partners, LLC. All rights reserved.