Last December the mayor's public safety policy manager Maria Rubio took a trip to San Francisco with the vice president of the Portland Business Alliance, Mike Kuykendall. They were there to talk to mayor Gavin Newsom and others about Portland's "street access for everyone" (SAFE) program, which spawned our ghastly sit/lie ordinance. Now, San Francisco has a SAFE committee of its own, and SF Chronicle columnist C.W.Nevius writes hopefully about that committee today.
So far, no sit/lie law is being mentioned. Instead, the committee is talking about a drug free zone around the city's train station. People are talking about "public urination, aggressive panhandling, and drug use," and there's an overall impression of collaboration being given off by Nevius' write-up. My caution would be that we had the same air of cooperation here in Portland, when the SAFE group began convening. People were optimistic about new levels of understanding between homeless advocates and the business community. But all they got was a bunch of promises to work on services, and a discriminatory and controversial law.
"Based on the last meeting, it was pretty disappointing," Nevius quotes Coalition Against Homelessness director Jennifer Friedenbach as saying. "It seems pretty clear that they want some kind of a criminal justice push for what are poverty issues."
Sounds all too familiar.
I'm beginning at last to understand why Sam Adams just took a trip to China: It would be nice if Portland could export something other than its intolerant and amoral strategies for further marginalizing poor people. Hope springs eternal.
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