Author’s note: This is a sports site. We cover Denver sports and Denver sports
media. This is the first piece I have ever published here that dealt with a local
issue of this variety. I chose to use South Stands Denver as a venue for this piece
because it’s available and accessible and because I feel very strongly in my
vehement opposition to Initiative 300 – or,
as I call it, Initiative “Aw, screw it”.
My morning commute takes me northbound on Downing street each day on the stretch between
Evans and Alameda; right past Washington park. The yards of the homes opposite the park
almost all have signs reading “No on 300 – we can do better”.
What residents fear is that that if Denver’s Initiative 300, dubbed by its supporters
the “Right to Survive” initiative, passes on Tuesday, May 7, Washington Park will become
a dystopian refugee camp for Denver’s homeless.
Language within the proposed ordinance allows the following
in public spaces:
Resting in outdoor public places in a non-obstructive manner;
Sheltering oneself in outdoor public places in a non-obstructive manner;
Eating, sharing, or giving food in public places where food is allowed; or
Occupying one’s own legally parked car or another legally parked car with the owner’s
permission.
It would end Denver’s urban camping ban which has been in effect since 2012 and it would
without question turn Denver parks into campgrounds for those “experiencing
homelessness”. Residents of the Wash Park neighborhood have every reason to fight the
measure. It could potentially devastate their property values.
Some parts of town are already experiencing this, even with the camping ban in place. My
brother owns a home near the corner of 23rd and Arapahoe street – downtown, not far from
the Denver Rescue Mission. A massive encampment has formed on that block filled with
tents and lean-tos, shopping carts, stolen bicycles, open drinking and drug use and
piles of garbage and human excrement. It’s called “Jerry’s world”, named for the first
person to set up camp there. Residents have posted signs saying things like
“homelessness is not a crime” and “move on to where?”. If Initiative 300 passes this
unsightly debacle would not only become perfectly legal but situations like it would
inevitably pop up in every area of town as more and more destitute people flock to make
the city of Denver their home.
Already Denver is a destination city for the career homeless. I know this because I work
in an area where I encounter many people who are wandering the street, pulling along
suitcases or pushing carts or baby strollers overflowing with sleeping bags, blankets,
cardboard signs and other meager belongings and I strike up conversations with them.
They come here, often via the downtown Greyhound station, from all over the U.S..
Arizona is a place I am commonly told that folks came here from, along with Michigan,
Texas and California. What I almost never hear is “Colorado”.
There’s an organization in Denver called “Homeless Out Loud” that seemingly openly
encourages people to become and remain homeless. This group “loudly” supports Initiative
300 and the perceived right of people to place temporary shelters wherever they please.
This group exacerbates the problem and seeks to absolve people of personal
responsibility for their own situations and encourages more of the wandering to wander
into Denver.
Denver’s climate is one reason that people come here – along with legalized marijuana
and relatively lenient laws dealing with urban camping. Denver may have a ban in affect
(that Initiative 300 seeks to end) but that has done little to dissuade people from
coming here to experience homelessness. Were Initiative 300 to pass this would only
become that much more desirable a destination, thus turbo-charging the problem with
homelessness in our city.
Aside from its toxic effects in terms of luring more needy people to the Denver area and
vastly increasing urban blight, the measure would also have devastating effects on
homeless people. A more appropriate name for the measure than “Right to Survive” might
be “Aw, screw it” because that’s essentially what it says. It says there’s no sense in
trying to solve the problem of homelessness or even to lend people a hand. It says
“let’s just give up and let them live in the streets and in our parks and on downtown
sidewalks”. It absolves us as a community of the challenge of actually confronting a
serious and quickly growing problem.
Without a far better solution Denver’s homelessness crisis is well on its way to
rivaling those of Portland, Seattle and San Francisco.
Recently a friend of mine panned the anti-300 slogan by quipping that people who say “we
can do better” don’t have any better ideas. Well, I believe that I do have a better idea
than initiative 300 – or more precisely a set of ideas.
I call it Initiative 303 and it’s going to cost some money. A ton of money, in fact. But
we’re spending money already. Every time a fire engine and a Denver Health ambulance are
dispatched to see to a suffering addict or a wounded wanderer the cost to the taxpayers
in thousands of dollars and that happens all day every day; so while the costs of
Initiative 303 may seem shocking at first it’s important to realize that in the long run
we would save.
We can’t begin to address the homelessness crisis in Denver without first recognizing
that it has much more to do with addiction that it does anything else. Yes, the lack of
affordable housing is a contributing factor. However, the lion’s share of people who are
simply down on their luck are able to find programs and assistance to keep them off the
streets. The people who wind up “out there” are at least 90% addicts and the alcoholics
who forego such programs because those require their sobriety. Therefore, treatment for
addiction must be at the core of any effective initiative.
Initiative 303 has as its basic tenets: a “Slab City”, “tough love” law enforcement,
treatment, counseling, and ultimately job placement. I’ll discuss each. And, again, it’s
going to cost the taxpayers of Denver real money. A whole lot more money than initiative
“Aw, screw it”.
Slab City
This is the potentially controversial part of my plan. The City of Denver would secure a
location onto which to pour a massive square-mile concrete slab surrounded with a
chain-link fence. Urban campers would be invited to set up there. Vehicles could be
parked inside, RVs and tiny houses could be donated and placed there for people to live
in along with the usual tents and temporary structures.
Law enforcement within that fenced area would be limited to crimes against persons –
assault, rape and the like. No enforcement of drug laws would be allowed. No property
could be seized. For the most part nobody would be bothered there. Friendly “beat cops”
would walk with no other purpose than to insure
the safety of the people there.
Four large concrete bathroom facilities would be provided – complete with showers and
flushing johns – and cleaned regularly with a spray truck the way the ones in our parks
are. Electrical outlets would also be provided along with mail boxes and addresses for
those willing to disclose their identities. This would provide people with a hopefully
temporary yet legally permanent location so that they would have the option to send and
receive documentation.
Slab City would provide a centralized location for aid agencies and treatment providers
to reach the people they need to reach. By not being forced to constantly be on the move
the residents could forge relationships and relish some sense of community as they are
offered opportunities to get their lives together.
Outside of Slab City (or cities), however, Denver would take the tact of strictly
enforcing laws against urban camping. The penalty for loitering or sleeping in a public
place or right of way outside of the space or spaces would be three days in the city
jail – or a new facility designed and built specifically for the offense. This is where
“tough love” comes in. Law enforcement’s role would grow significantly under Initiative
303. Denver would be at once providing space for urban camping and putting its foot down
against it.
After three days in jail offenders would be required to report once weekly for a period
of six weeks to a caseworker for counseling or once again be in violation of the law and
have a warrant issued. These caseworkers would be empowered to help clients rehabilitate
from drug dependency by encouraging them to enroll in a 90 day city supported program
which could in turn prescribe medicines specifically designed to curb addictions to
specific substances. These medicines would
be provided at taxpayer expense.
Graduation from the 90 day program would result in a client being a candidate for
city-supported affordable housing and a comprehensive job-placement program offering $15
/ hour entry-level jobs both public and private. Businesses wishing to seek workers in
this way could apply with the city’s placement agency and the city itself could put
others to work in maintenance jobs and offer additional job training for workers wishing
to earn more. However, in order to remain either in subsidized housing or in job
placement candidates would have to agree to be drug tested and remain – if not
completely sober – free of the addictions that landed them on the street in the first
place lest they find themselves back at the beginning of the process – with three days
in jail
I gleaned some of these ideas from the phenomenal documentary “” by TV Station KOMO in
Seattle. I strongly feel that before anybody votes yes on Initiative 300 that they
should see that even-handed hour-long film.
I’m going to vote no on Initiative 300 and I think you should, too. But i’m not voting
no because I lack compassion. I’m voting no because the initiative lacks compassion –
and because it will contribute to the decay of my gorgeous city. I don’t believe that
simply saying “Aw, screw it” should be a policy. However, we can’t vote no on 300 and
then just walk away. Denver city leadership needs to provide the “do better” that
opponents of the measure have expressed a desire for.
Let’s take the lead. We’ve shown that this state and this fine city aren’t fearful of
going about things in new and different ways. Let’s provide a model for the rest of the
country – especially places like Portland, Seattle and San Francisco – to follow when it
comes to addressing homelessness and the causes of homelessness and not let Denver fall
into the kind of desperate disrepair that those places have. Let’s not be bleeding
hearts about it, either. Let’s have expectations of people and recognize that with the
right hands-up in place there’s no excuse to live life inhumanely and stop encouraging
those who insist on doing so to do so in Denver.
Written by Colin D.