Where in Bend would you propose a homeless camp?
KTVZ Asked by KTVZ
1,350 Votes

Where in Bend would you propose a homeless camp?

Tell us your ideas

18

No permanent homeless camps

10

Tell us your ideas

16 Comments
Ben Hargis
3
Ben Hargis

Away from residential areas, schools, and churches.

Reply
0
DeBacker Melis
DeBacker Melis

😂😂😂

Latterdaysaint
Latterdaysaint

Not a good idea

Dixon Rose
1
Dixon Rose

Put it on the west side of town. Lotsa wide open spaces over there.

Reply
John Philo
1
John Philo

Vacant land by COCC.

Reply
Brad Livsey
0
Brad Livsey

KENTUCKY on the coast in the sand!

Reply
Paul Owen
0
Paul Owen

West side at 9th and Wilson 3.5 acres available close to services and utilities.

Reply
Pamela Joe
0
Pamela Joe

In the country away from home owners, farms, businesses. Unless this facility is strickly monitored there will be trash and drugs everywhere. Make a homeless city. With garbage. Water, shower and sewer services and let them go. Daily shuttle might be a good idea.

Reply
Jain Eisenbeis Wilson
0
Jain Eisenbeis Wilson

East of town and have a few shuttles throughout the day & evening

Reply
k san
0
k san

Yes, Ben Hargis: Away from residential areas churches, schools. NO ONE wants that in their back yard. I realize there needs to be managed camps for homeless people, and I hope some of the planned tiny-house-villages (away from established n'hoods) can provide for them on vast empty land in Redmond.

Reply
Rick Allen
0
Rick Allen

I would put it in Kate Browns yard!!!

Reply
Justine Lowry
0
Justine Lowry

Adjacent to Fire and Police services, crisis counseling services and safety as a focus.

Reply
Franklin Bullwheel
0
Franklin Bullwheel

Reed Mkt road ROW east of 27th. Already fenced, sidewalks on Reed Mkt and 27th, easy access, treed, Utilities on 27th. 1.3 acres or much larger with cooperation of adjacent property owner.

Reply

No permanent homeless camps

8 Comments
J
4
J

All in favor of helping. Fine line between helping and enabling. If you build it they will come

Reply
M F
M F

If the rent and housing situation would become more affordable for the people who work here, maybe then the people living in their cars or tents that have a job will be able to get back into a place of their own and off the street. As for the rest? Why keep giving them incentives?

Christena
2
Christena

Don't cover up the problem, find ways to help those that want help and for those that don't discurage camping in town.

Reply
Kimmy Wasatch
2
Kimmy Wasatch

More freebies equal more homeless. Lots of work out there.

Reply
Latterdaysaint
2
Latterdaysaint

Homeless shelter not homeless camp!

Reply
Vernon Budd
1
Vernon Budd

Run them out of Oregon period

Reply
Johnny Mooney
0
Johnny Mooney

I believe in a hand up, not a hand out. I believe permanent state/local government sponsored camp(s) enable bad decisions and bad behavior. Limited time for assistance motivates change. Everyone needs a hand up sometimes.

Reply
Judy Ostrom-Dixon
0
Judy Ostrom-Dixon

We must address addiction and mental illness, otherwise the problem will just continue to grow!

Reply
Kenneth Emmrich
0
Kenneth Emmrich

The more you do for the homeless the more homeless there are. The more homeless there are, the more they do. Do you you see a pattern? The vast percentage of the homeless population is a chosen lifestyle. If you cut off all services the homeless get there would little to no homeless.

Reply
Do you support the cellphone ban in Oregon schools?
KTVZ Asked by KTVZ
268 Votes

Do you support the cellphone ban in Oregon schools?

YES

5

NO

1

YES

5 Comments
Steve Reeves
1
Steve Reeves

Many of my students display addictive behaviors regarding their phones, and it has proven detrimental to their learning and social development. Any positive of cell phone use is vastly outweighed by negative consequences.

Reply
Sam Davis
1
Sam Davis

Long overdue. Students need to focus on being educated in school, not watching videos, playing games, & chatting with each other. Educators and others do not need the distraction that cell cause. If there are emergencies that students need to know about there are other ways for them to find out.

Reply
k san
0
k san

Kids are way too addicted to their phones and it is affecting their learning. Phones could be kept in a basket in the classroom in case of emergency, but definitely NOT with the kid.

Reply
David Kline
0
David Kline

My teaching friends say it's been a battle to keep kids off their phones in class and wastes a bunch of class time time addressing this. How will this be enforced any differently though?

Reply
Kimmy Wasatch
0
Kimmy Wasatch

Between cell phone usage and lower graduating standards, OR is failing students

Reply

NO

1 Comment
Tammie Hagemann
0
Tammie Hagemann

There are times that they shouldn't have them but check them at the door of class rooms to cut back on the use. Emergencies do happen and cells are useful

Reply
Given the recent wildfires near Redmond, would you support a personal fireworks ban?
KTVZ Asked by KTVZ
185 Votes

Given the recent wildfires near Redmond, would you support a personal fireworks ban?

YES

0

NO

1

YES

0 Comment
No one has commented yet

NO

1 Comment
Tammie Hagemann
0
Tammie Hagemann

Parents should look after there children better and the fireworks they buy

Reply
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