HailBlazers
RipCity
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 20,131
- Likes
- 17,518
- Points
- 113
‘It’s nuts down there’ -- Lawlessness spikes in Portland’s Old Town
More than 100 tents dot sidewalks in Portland’s Old Town. Pedestrians have to step around feces and garbage as they walk through the neighborhood.
Owners of businesses shuttered during the first wave of Oregon’s coronavirus epidemic are worried about reopening starting Friday, their entrances blocked by street campers.
“State of Old Town & Reaching Out for Help,’’ read the subject line of an email from Helen Ying, chair of the Old Town Community Association to Mayor Ted Wheeler’s office. She included photos of the area’s blight.
The complaints prompted Police Chief Jami Resch to devise a “high-visibility'’ police patrol plan for Old Town. On Wednesday, officers began what will be a 30-day presence on bikes, in cars and by foot.
Residents and property owners say they’re seeing blatant drug dealing, aggressive behavior and unprovoked assaults.
The number of people living in tents on Old Town sidewalks has spiked dramatically, they say, since the city halted cleanup of homeless camps because of the epidemic.
While police calls from the neighborhood are down, Central Precinct Cmdr. Mike Krantz said it may be because businesses are closed and fewer people are in the area during the day to report offenses.
Scott Kerman, executive director of Blanchet House, said he rarely called police before the COVID-19 public health crisis. The nonprofit provides free food, clothing and housing to people in need.
“Everything was more or less pretty chill,’’ Kerman said, during the community association’s board meeting Wednesday. “That’s changed a lot under the current situation. We’re not seeing a lot of our regulars anymore. … We do have elements coming in here just looking to cause trouble.’’
On Wednesday morning, a Blanchet House resident was outside cleaning up when a stranger walked up, looked at him and took a swing, breaking his nose, Kerman said.
“It was totally unprovoked,’’ he said
https://www.oregonlive.com/coronavi...-town-as-coronavirus-shutters-businesses.html
More than 100 tents dot sidewalks in Portland’s Old Town. Pedestrians have to step around feces and garbage as they walk through the neighborhood.
Owners of businesses shuttered during the first wave of Oregon’s coronavirus epidemic are worried about reopening starting Friday, their entrances blocked by street campers.
“State of Old Town & Reaching Out for Help,’’ read the subject line of an email from Helen Ying, chair of the Old Town Community Association to Mayor Ted Wheeler’s office. She included photos of the area’s blight.
The complaints prompted Police Chief Jami Resch to devise a “high-visibility'’ police patrol plan for Old Town. On Wednesday, officers began what will be a 30-day presence on bikes, in cars and by foot.
Residents and property owners say they’re seeing blatant drug dealing, aggressive behavior and unprovoked assaults.
The number of people living in tents on Old Town sidewalks has spiked dramatically, they say, since the city halted cleanup of homeless camps because of the epidemic.
While police calls from the neighborhood are down, Central Precinct Cmdr. Mike Krantz said it may be because businesses are closed and fewer people are in the area during the day to report offenses.
Scott Kerman, executive director of Blanchet House, said he rarely called police before the COVID-19 public health crisis. The nonprofit provides free food, clothing and housing to people in need.
“Everything was more or less pretty chill,’’ Kerman said, during the community association’s board meeting Wednesday. “That’s changed a lot under the current situation. We’re not seeing a lot of our regulars anymore. … We do have elements coming in here just looking to cause trouble.’’
On Wednesday morning, a Blanchet House resident was outside cleaning up when a stranger walked up, looked at him and took a swing, breaking his nose, Kerman said.
“It was totally unprovoked,’’ he said
https://www.oregonlive.com/coronavi...-town-as-coronavirus-shutters-businesses.html

