|
TENT
CITY4 (TC4) FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
What is Tent City?
- Tent City is a temporary
encampment of homeless adults that moves
approximately every 90 days.
- There are two Tent Cities in King
County: Tent City 3 in Seattle, and Tent City 4 on
the Eastside.
What is the mission of Tent City?
- To provide a safe place for
homeless people to spend the night and keep their
belongings;
- To give a homeless person the
privacy and dignity of their own residence (a tent);
- To develop a sense of community
for homeless people who are isolated and alone;
- To empower homeless people by
being responsible for their own community.
Who sponsors Tent City?
Tent City is sponsored and managed by
SHARE/WHEEL. (SHARE stands for "Seattle Housing and
Resource Effort". WHEEL stands for "Women's Housing
Equality and Enhancement League".) SHARE/WHEEL operates
15 fixed site shelters and two Tent City locations.
SHARE/WHEEL manages 350 indoor shelter beds in Seattle,
making it the largest shelter-providing organization in
the Pacific Northwest.
How long has SHARE/WHEEL been
operating?
SHARE/WHEEL has been operating fixed
site shelters for 15 years. SHARE/WHEEL has been
operating Tent Cities for five years.
How is SHARE/WHEEL funded?
- SHARE/WHEEL is a 501(c)(3)
non-profit, tax-exempt, public charity.
- SHARE/WHEEL receives about 80% of
its funding from the City of Seattle, through
contracts for the management of its indoor shelter
facilities in Seattle. Its Tent City 4 shelter on
the Eastside is not funded by any government funds:
It is funded by donations only.
Who runs Tent City 4?
Each Tent City has an executive
committee elected by the residents. The Executive
Committee is re-elected at regular intervals, to ensure
rotation of leadership. All residents are required to
attend weekly community meetings and to perform at least
one task a day for the community, for a minimum of about
10 hours every two weeks.
How many people live in TC4?
The numbers vary but the average in
Woodinville will be from 40 to the maximum allowed 80.
Who are the people living in TC4?
Homeless adults: single men and women,
and couples. Children are not allowed in Tent City.
How does TC4 handle security?
- Tent City 4 is in a fenced area,
with a single entry/exit point which is staffed
around the clock. Potential residents must have, or
obtain, photo ID. With the help of the King County
Sheriff’s Department, a check is performed for each
applicant in which the applicant’s name is checked
against Washington Criminal Information Center (WACIC)
and the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) for
outstanding warrants and sex offender status.
- All residents must agree to abide
by a code of conduct (see below), which includes
rules making the area a drug- alcohol-and
weapon-free zone.
What happens to potential residents
who are not accepted?
- If a person seeking admission has
outstanding offenses in either area, the person is
not admitted and the police are notified to
determine arrest status or method of escorting the
person out of the area.
- If the person does not have
appropriate ID, he/she must obtain it within 48
hours or leave.
- If the person is denied access to
Tent City due to a history of violent behavior or
sexual offenses, he/she is personally escorted to
the bus and given a bus pass if necessary. If buses
are not running, the individual is placed in a
taxicab with taxi script.
What happens to residents who
violate the Tent City Code of Conduct?
- Illegal activities are referred
to law enforcement. In fact, the police drop by Tent
City at unannounced intervals throughout the day and
night. They get to know the Tent City residents, and
work together to maintain a peaceful camp.
- The code of conduct includes
consequences for other violations. Repeated or
serious offenses will result in the resident being
barred from Tent City.
Where does Tent City get tents,
blankets, food and other necessities?
Many tents, blankets and other
supplies, including food and clothing, are donated by
community support from local businesses, parishioners
from the host church and from other church
congregations, and by residents of the surrounding
neighborhood.
How does Tent City get hot meals?
Usually a hot dinner is provided by a
church or other charitable organization. Other food is
donated, but refrigeration facilities are limited. TC4
includes a kitchen tent with a microwave oven for food
preparation, but there are no electrical burners or open
flames allowed. The Host Congregation is not expected
to, but may choose to provide meals or any assistance
they deem necessary for the well-being of the Tent City
residents. Over the past two years, more than 50
religious and secular organizations have served at least
35,000 hot suppers at Tent City, for an estimated value
of over $92,000.
Does TC4 have toilet and shower
facilities?
TC4 has portable toilets which are
serviced 3 times per week. A portable shower on a
trailer has been transported to the site. Drainage from
the shower and sinks (called "grey water") is piped into
the septic system at the church. The plumbing set up is
inspected before and during the stay by city code
enforcement to ensure public health and environmental
conditions are maintained.
What about garbage and laundry?
- TC4's garbage dumpsters are
emptied weekly. Residents do litter patrol of TC4
and surrounding areas. Volunteers will help remove
recyclables regularly.
- Blankets and sleeping bags are
laundered once a week at Everett Overall Laundry
(services have been donated by this business for two
years—free of charge). Personal laundry is handled
by each resident, usually at a laundromat.
- How is transportation for
residents handled?
- SHARE/WHEEL provides METRO bus
passes so TC4 residents can get to their jobs, to
job interviews, and to medical appointments.
- When bus service is reduced (on
weekends and holidays) taxi script is available.
Also, a regular “shuttle service” manned by
host/resident volunteers will operate on Sundays.
Church and resident volunteers are on an evening
stand-by rotation to bring any later-bus-arrivals
back to Tent City from downtown Woodinville.
What percentage of Tent City
residents have a job?
- The percentage varies with the
TC4 population. Many of the residents are employed,
either permanently or temporarily. You will probably
see Tent City residents at the bus stop very very
early in the morning, because they will be down at
Labor Ready by 5:30 a.m. to get day-labor jobs. ,
Other residents are in educational programs to
improve job skills. There are a few people with
disabilities that prevent them from getting a job;
many of those are on waiting lists for permanent
disability housing.
Do people leave Tent City 4?
- The typical length of stay for
residents is about 6 weeks.
- The Eastside Tent City has found
this area to be rich in day-labor and other jobs
which lead to permanent employment. In fact, several
residents of the 2004 Tent City stay in Woodinville
now work and live in Woodinville—such as at
McLendon’s and Woodinville Lumber.
- Other residents, after living a
more settled, safe lifestyle surrounded by community
volunteers coming and going 24/7, repair
relationships with families and move home.
- One other unique event at Tent
City is that while working to keep their own
community together, many residents develop
friendships with others living in Tent City: After
saving money in the free shelter while working, they
pool their savings in groups of 2 or 4 people to
rent housing together.
Can I come to Tent City 4 to see it
firsthand?
Yes, Tent City 4 is open to visitors
24/7. TC4 is currently hosted by Northshore United
Church of Christ, 18900 168th Ave NE, until later in the
summer. From I-405 go East on Hwy 522. Take the second
exit, 195th Street, and go right. Follow this road
(Woodinville-Duvall Road) until you reach the lighted
intersection at 168th; turn left, and the church is on
the right in about one-half block. Visits are encouraged
and complete tours can be given during the day and early
evening.
Does Tent City pose a threat to its
neighbors or to school children?
No. According to an official King
County investigation: "Concerning children's safety and
the potential threat posed by Tent City 4, no evidence
exists in the record suggesting area children or others
are facing safety risk.... There is no reason to fear
people living at Tent City 4."
Has a Tent City ever been located
in a residential area or near schools?
Yes. Because the host is usually a
church, Tent Cities have normally been in residential
neighborhoods. In Bothell, an elementary school was
located within a block of Tent City 4; previous Seattle
Tent Cities have been within two blocks of at least ten
schools, pre-schools or day cares. On the Eastside, Tent
City has now been located near or beside schools in
about half of its nine sites over two years. School
officials have not reported any incidents of Tent City
residents having contact with schools or their children,
except to lessen the amount of litter in the area. Abd
during the entire history of all Tent Cities, not a
single child or other neighbor has been harmed by any
Tent City resident, according to police records.
Are neighborhood schools and
children safe from possible intruders?
Schools already have procedures in
place to deal with unauthorized persons in their
buildings and on their grounds. For specific
information, contact the schools directly.
Has there been an increase in crime
in areas where SHARE/WHEEL's Tent Cities have been
located?
No. According to the police in
Seattle, Shoreline, Tukwila, Bothell, Kirkland,
Bellevue, and Woodinville, there has been no measurable
increase in crime in neighborhoods near any Tent City.
On May 21, 2004, the Seattle Times published an
independent investigation which found that SHARE/WHEEL's
Tent Cities do not affect crime rates.
What was the police coverage at the
previous Tent City locations?
Generally, law enforcement has made
regular daily contact with Tent City. Unscheduled visits
are made several times a day. This is the model followed
by the King County Sheriff’s officers (under contract
with the city) at the previous Woodinville downtown site
and also the site at Woodinville Unitarian Universalist
Church. In testifying before the Woodinville City
Council this month (May 2006), Chief Kent Baxter told
the City Council that this arrangement had been
successful for Tent City 4 and the local residents. |