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Do you think there should be a permanent location for the houseless to camp? If so, where?
KTVZ Asked by KTVZ
1,301 Votes

Do you think there should be a permanent location for the houseless to camp? If so, where?

Yes, I do! (comment below where)

13

No, other options should be available.

13

Yes, I do! (comment below where)

13 Comments
Q Myers
3
Q Myers

If the camp is removed, it should be relocated next door to city hall in hopes that seeing it everyday will spur the politicians to tackle the problem.

Reply
George Robirts
2
George Robirts

Yes, and it should be located right where the old Bend KOA was located. And it should be overseen and managed properly. The property was aready set up as a campground once.

Reply
JohnWayne Kenneth Pool
2
JohnWayne Kenneth Pool

It makes more sense to have set locations where they can go and people who want to avoid them know where NOT to go.

Reply
Doris Medlock
2
Doris Medlock

There is a old RV park off of Robal RD north of Bend that has been up for sell that would be a great spot.Thete is already alot of homeless that are located back behind there anyways.

Reply
Gina Bowlin
2
Gina Bowlin

The old KOA Campground would be perfect charge them $20 a week

Reply
k san
1
k san

Homelessness is a huge problem here already. We don't want to become California. Establishing a permanent location that is pretty well out of public sight, away from major thoroughfares is a good solution.

Reply
Cristal DeJarnac
1
Cristal DeJarnac

They have to have somewhere to stay. Having to constantly move or lose everything over and over makes it real hard to get ahead.

Reply
Madi Bordeaux
1
Madi Bordeaux

The issue isnt going away and displacing the problems adds up to a total higher cost for the community than just creating a managed camp with preventative services. In medical bills and service calls alone, it would save money. As well as security and waste costs for businesses n individuals. Duh.

Reply
Paul Owen
0
Paul Owen

9th and Wilson or on city property off of Cooley road with showers, garbage and sanitation and have satellite social services available. Give the homeless a hand up not hand out. Any one of us depending on our health and employment status could end up homeless.

Reply
Tim Wheelis
0
Tim Wheelis

Out there by widgi creek or N/W crossing I can't help but notice the people with all the answers never offer there back yard

Reply
Ben Hargis
0
Ben Hargis

In Northwest Crossing

Reply
Tabitha Post
0
Tabitha Post

Everyone deserves a safe place to sleep

Reply
Rondo
0
Rondo

Yes, but not one location! The larger the camp, the larger the NIMBY. The City of Bend owns many small 'unusable' properties. We can put a dumpster on some, and a homeless 'attendant' to help keep the neighborhood clean.

Reply

No, other options should be available.

12 Comments
Sussie Due
3
Sussie Due

What we need to do is stop drawing them in by catering to them. Its like feeding stray cats. You feed a couple and pretty soon you are overwhelmed with them because the word gets out.

Reply
💛🖤 RAG 💛🖤
2
💛🖤 RAG 💛🖤

The properties or right of ways where they are camping are not intended to live on! Now that Portland is starting to remove them we don't want the homeless people to move to Bend. Open homeless shelters and put these people to work, there are plenty of jobs!!

Reply
Sussie Due
Sussie Due

Of course they are going to move from Portland to here. They are following their chief of Police.

Ross Poldark
1
Ross Poldark

Businesses are having a hard time finding workers. The solution, these jobless kids can find work, and in return they can pay for their own up keep (sanitation serv) Remember the old adage "give a man a fish and he eats for one day, teach a man to fish and he eats for ever. Enough of the handouts.

Reply
Christena
0
Christena

Like a bus ticket to somewhere they can work and afford living.

Reply
Judy Ostrom-Dixon
0
Judy Ostrom-Dixon

It is more of an addiction and mental health problem, fix those and it would eliminate 90%of the homeless and then help those who trying to better their lives with affordable housing!

Reply
Patricia Brady-McKinney
0
Patricia Brady-McKinney

Move them to the yards and streets of the politicians who allow this scourge to keep growing. Bend City Counselors should be happy to have them in their yards or streets. As for the people who would actually like to work and get back into a house, put them in the shelters and help them.

Reply
Johnny Mooney
0
Johnny Mooney

For MOST homeless it's a choice. They choose their addiction and the lifestyle of being homeless and all that comes with it. For some however it's a temporary situation and they need a hand up vs. a handout. I believe we are beginning to ENABLE BAD BEHAVIOR by catering to the homeless population.

Reply
Ltk Man
0
Ltk Man

We don't have a homeless problem. We have a drug problem. According to research, apx. 85% of homeless people are addicts. Stop catering to poor choices!! Build it and they will come...just ask Portland.

Reply
Latterdaysaint
0
Latterdaysaint

Bend needs more homeless shelters

Reply
Kimmy Wasatch
0
Kimmy Wasatch

Jobs a plenty, stop all the free handouts and they will go to work. First thing homeless need to is to clean up their own mess instead of taxpayers having to pay. The more they are given they will expect more and do nothing.

Reply
Have these high winds affected you or your home this week?
KTVZ Asked by KTVZ
146 Votes

Have these high winds affected you or your home this week?

YES

0

NO

0

YES

0 Comment
No one has commented yet

NO

0 Comment
No one has commented yet
    Do you agree with the May 1st deadline for homeless campers to move?
KTVZ Asked by KTVZ
1,320 Votes

    Do you agree with the May 1st deadline for homeless campers to move?

YES

12

NO

1

YES

12 Comments
Barb Hayden
2
Barb Hayden

Never should have been allowed in the first place! Bend needs to develop a site with bathrooms, showers and rules,like NO drugs and NO trash. At least Redmond is trying to help these people. Take a. Lesson from them. Get off the dime and solve the problem

Reply
Tylor Meyer
1
Tylor Meyer

They have had excessive amount of time to move off land they are not even allowed to live on!

Reply
Just a voice Figg
1
Just a voice Figg

They have had ample time to move. Vegetation reduction helps slow and or stop wildfires that will eventually hit that area and destroy millions of dollars worth of homes and people's lives.

Reply
Cheri Trettin
0
Cheri Trettin

I say move the campers off forest land and onto main street if you want public funding for homelessness in Bend to become an immediate priority!!!

Reply
Jeff Sanders
0
Jeff Sanders

Living in SE Bend I really enjoyed going to China Hat with my Jeep to off road and walk with my dogs. The thought of being shot has kept me from doing that for a while now. Good riddance to the homeless and make it where they can't come back.

Reply
Joe Dillon
0
Joe Dillon

it is public land, NOT someones home! The public cannot use it without fear of saftey. We DONT need another human caused fire that happens EVERY year out there, we have enough to worry about with mother nature fires. Time to move on!

Reply
Linda Knowlton
0
Linda Knowlton

Fire danger and trash in the forest

Reply
jennifer stenkamp
0
jennifer stenkamp

Being homeless is usually the result of bad choices. My taxes help pay for government land. Living there rent free and creating tons of garbage, being a true threat to causing wildfires, behaving in a lawless manner angers too many of us who manage to pay for real housing. Move them out now.

Reply
Erin E Yates
0
Erin E Yates

We all have problems in life why do they think it is ok to do what they are doing, when the rest of us pay our taxes, go to work, get counseling if we have problems. The amount they spend on drugs, they could pay rent. It’s a choice and their choice is to do drugs and not work. DEATH and TAXES!!!

Reply
Goth Gaga
0
Goth Gaga

This homeless problem is a choice. These people are drug addicts that need to get clean and go back to work. They should be put into rehab while being counseled for their personal problems. Once clean they should be put to work doing tasks that prisoners do. If they refuse, then jail them.

Reply
Ron Rommel
0
Ron Rommel

The Homeless Campers are the wrong people on the wrong landscape due to their lack of cognitive awareness of fire. I and many others are willing to share grace for their position in life when they are willing to improve their situation through counseling, accepting shelter to transition life.

Reply
Latterdaysaint
0
Latterdaysaint

Yes and build more homeless shelters or provide jobs for them

Reply

NO

1 Comment
Diana Cockerill
0
Diana Cockerill

They are humans and have no other options.We try not to let that happen to unwanted pets, yet have no problem in letting it happen to, what many consider, unwanted people!

Reply

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