User:Mnqly14/Homelessness in Seattle

In the Seattle King County area, there are about 12,500 homeless people living on the streets or in shelters. On January 23, 2018, the street count of homeless individuals was 6320 (2015 = 3,772), the number of homeless individuals in Emergency Shelters was 3,585 (2015 = 3,282), and the number of homeless individuals in transitional housing was 2,285 (2015 = 2,993), for a total count of 12,112 (2015 = 10,047) homeless people. The percentages by race of those living in shelters consisted of: African American 40%, White 31%, Hispanic 12%, Multi-racial 6%, Asian/Pacific Islander 4%, Native American 2%, with 5% unknown. The trends show that combined efforts of Puget Sound, including the Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessness, to provide shelter, healthcare and other help for the homeless are having a positive impact, but that the numbers experiencing homelessness in the region are continuing to climb and, that the response is not adequate.

Annual One Night Count
In many cities and communities around the United States, volunteers and service workers count the number of people sleeping without adequate shelter—whether on the streets, in a vehicle, in makeshift shelters and tents, under roads, under freeway ramps, and the like— in one overnight period. However, it is acknowledged that such counts cannot determine all homeless people, nor cover all areas of the city.

The yearly One Night Count of the Homeless (ONC) in the Seattle and King County area is coordinated by Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessness(SKCCH) in coordination with other local social service providers, including The Downtown Emergency Service Center (DESC), The Compass Center, United Way of King County, and others. The Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessness (SKCCH), along with Operation Nightwatch, has organized Seattle/King County's one night count since 1980. Its website claims that "King County has one of the nation's best-established point-in-time counts of homeless people, and the One Night Count that is coordinated by that group is the largest community-organized effort" in the country.

The One Night Count from 2010 through 2018 for those living without shelter are as follows:

The One Night Count collects figures for those in shelters and transitional housing and releases those figures as well. In 1999, the count of homeless persons living both in and out of shelters in King County was 5,900. In 2000, the count was 6,900 homeless people; in 2001, 7,350; in 2002, 7,980; in 2003, 8,000; in 2004, 8,300; in 2006, 7,919; in 2007, 7,839; and in 2008, 8,439. In 2012, the One Night Count tallied 8,830 homeless people in King County, including those in emergency shelters and transitional housing programs. This number is essentially unchanged since 2009. In 2014, the figure was 9,294 people, and in 2015, the figure was about 10,300 people (3,772 counted outside, plus about 6,500 in shelters, transitional housing, and so on).

Health problems
According to the Count Us In survey, conducted around the Seattle area in January of 2019, 64% of respondents reported living with one or more health conditions. Health problems among the homeless population in Seattle include alcohol and substance abuse, post-traumatic stress disorder, physical ailments, and mental illnesses. Drug overdose deaths in King County were at an all time high in 2014 and while methadone treatment is available in King County, the region struggles to keep up with number of individuals who need treatment. The inability to obtain and afford healthcare comp

Many homeless people do not seek or cannot afford adequate healthcare. Common causes of death among homeless people in the Seattle area include intoxication, cardiovascular disease, and homicide. In 2003, the average age of death of a homeless person was 47.

Harassment
In December 2007, the Seattle City Council unanimously passed a measure prohibiting malicious harassment of a homeless person and declaring the act a misdemeanor. This law makes it illegal to damage a homeless person's personal items as well.

Responses
As of 2018, the estimated total cost of homelessness in the region was estimated at about one billion dollars per year, including medical, police, and all nonprofit and governmental efforts at all levels. This number is unverified. The City of Seattle 2020 Budget directly allocated $80 million for the Division of Homeless Strategy and Investment

The City of Seattle, King County, and the United Way of King County are the participants in the Seattle and King County Coalition on Homelessness. They are combining and coordinating efforts to respond to and end homelessness, while spending carefully. This coordinated effort is a response to previous findings from the Committee to End Homelessness in King County and the Ten year plan to End Homelessness, where committed organizations, including the United Way of King County, local businesses, faith based communities, housing organizations and human services organizations, studied the causes and solutions to homelessness.

Share/Wheel is self-help organization run by many homeless residents of Seattle. Share/Wheel has created 4 Tent Cities through the years. The first Tent City set up in 1990 at the Goodwill Games. It later became a self-managed homeless shelter at a Metro bus barn. It eventually moved to the Aloha Inn and created a self-managed transitional housing program. Tent City 2 was established on Beacon Hill in what would later become known as The Jungle, against the objections of the City of Seattle. Eviction notices were posted on the tents on July 2. Four days later on July 6, while most of the residents met with City Council member Peter Steinbrueck (who was attempting to delay action against the settlement), the Police bulldozed the camp site and private possessions.

Tent City 3 was created on March 31, 2000, on private land. The police did not intervene, but the City of Seattle sued the host over unpaid permit fees. Share/Wheel and the City of Seattle settled out of court with a Consent Decree " after a Superior Court judge warned the City that it would lose the case. Tent City 3 moves from location to location every 60–90 days. Tent City 4 split from Tent City 3 and shifts from place to place on the East side of Lake Washington. Tent cities shelter homeless persons who can not or do not wish to attend a public shelter for various reasons. The City of Seattle does not approve of these tent cities. Effective March 13, 2012, the Consent Decree between Share/Wheel and the City of Seattle ended. Tent City 3 has been studied extensively, and is noted by many in the United States to be an encampment that works.

There are other encampments in the Seattle area:
 * Nickelsville: formed in 2008 in protest over the policies of Mayor Nickels, whom they believed was encouraging the police to assault, injure, and browbeat the homeless. It has no formal connection to Share/Wheel.
 * United We Stand: capacity 35 people, which split from Tent City 3 in late 2014.
 * Camp Unity Eastside: capacity 100 people, on the east side of Lake Washington in King County, which split from Tent City 4 in late 2012.

There are homeless shelters across the Seattle area that provide beds, meals, showers, and laundry services. Some shelters in the Seattle area require their residents to leave the shelter between 5 and 7 A.M.

In addition to sanctioned homeless encampments, Seattle philanthropists have also become involved with serving the disenfranchised. The Seattle Block Project builds tiny homes in volunteers' backyards to house a single vetted individual. The goal of the project is to give a person a second chance. The project offers the opportunity for stability and safety, while asking the community to be involved in both donating space and labor. Through housing an individual and asking others to participate in the project the return is twofold, a person gets a safe place to live, and a community comes together to help the homeless. The Aurora Commons is a private effort to provide services to the homeless on Aurora Avenue North.

Operation Sack Lunch
Operation Sack Lunch is a city-funded outdoor feeding program begun in 2007, located under the Interstate 5 viaduct at Columbia street in downtown Seattle. In 2012, Seattle Human Services Director Danette Smith said that because of poor conditions under the freeway, it should close or move indoors. The program's operators said it could not continue at all if forced to move indoors, and no indoor location was found during three years of discussion over the fate of the program, with some Seattle city council members resisting efforts to move it indoors. In fall of 2012, a transition program was recommended by a Mayor-appointed Task Force.

Income sources
Real Change news is a newspaper sold by homeless street vendors; they buy the paper for 60 cents and sell it for 2 dollars. The Real Change has increased in sales by 41% since 2007. An increase in vendors was also recorded, growing from approximately 230 to 350 vendors in one month.

In 2009, income resources used by homeless persons included: 558 homeless persons who received Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), 481 receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI), 355 received general assistance (GAU), 233 had other sources of income, 142 were on general assistance (GAX), 49 received unemployment compensation, 21 received income through the Alcohol and Drug Addiction Treatment Act (ADATSA), and 590 homeless persons had an unknown source of income.

Seattle is Dying documentary
In 2019 KOMO-TV aired the hour-long documentary Seattle Is Dying written and reported by Eric Johnson, exploring homelessness in Seattle. Johnson said local authorities did not provide effective responses to the problems as he identified them, and said some law enforcement officials were not helping to address what the Johnson said were ongoing issues. Several Seattle media outlets and homelessness advocates criticized KOMO and Johnson for what they said was an inaccurate and biased picture of the issues, and that the contents of the documentary were motivated by the right-wing agenda of the nationwide Sinclair Broadcast Group, which has little interest in local Seattle politics but benefits from spreading a negative image of the liberal, west-coast city. Tim Harris of Real Change called it "misery porn".

The documentary said there is a homelessness crisis in Seattle and said the causes include a lack of an urban social policy and the rampant drug use. Johnson advocated for a set of solutions, and said that local officials failed to engage with what he said were documented problems.

KOMO TV said their documentary was effective in influencing Seattle officials. Another of Sinclair's properties, KRCR-TV, said officials in Shasta County, California, have also responded to the documentary, and that they are taking measures to combat similar issues they face in their region.

Some advocates for the homeless have argued that the documentary focuses too heavily on issues such as drug use, countering that the high cost of living and lack of affordable housing are at the core of homelessness.

Pete Holmes, the Seattle City Attorney, criticized the documentary, defending the city's efforts on drug crimes and homelessness.