Solution for Klamath Falls, OR, Homeless.

Micro-communities: Solution to homelessness?

KLAMATH FALLS, OR— Huts for the homeless is a solution for Klamath Falls, OR

Note: I am inquiring to see if there are any City Ordinances on Huts in the City of Klamath Falls as to where they can or cannot be placed? Or if there are no City Ordinances on Huts at all. Huts for the homeless is a solution for Klamath Falls, OR but on wheels so they can be moved around if need be.

Tiny Houses for the Homeless: An Affordable Solution Catches On

A growing number of towns and cities have found a practical solution to homelessness through the construction of tiny-house villages—and housing officials are taking notice.

A national movement of tiny-house villages, an alternative approach to housing the homeless that's beginning to catch the interest of national advocates and government housing officials alike.

"Chronically homeless people—people who have disabilities and are homeless for long periods of time—can be very expensive to systems of public care."

Government officials and city planners are beginning to see the tiny-house village as one viable solution for addressing homelessness. Currently, the various efforts to house the homeless in tiny-house villages comprise a small and pioneering movement: But each new project helps create lessons and a model for other communities.

Comments:

A small unit like these could be built at community colleges by carpentry, plumbing & HVAC students, and then transported to a prepared site?

Some could also be built by the homeless in conjunction with community college students.

It's better to build them on the trailer because they are not permanent structures and can not be taxed as if they were, they only need to renew their tag each year.

The real cost of homelessness

Efforts to break through the red tape and raise money to house the homeless almost always pay off for a community.

You seem to hear it all the time: cities claiming to have ended either chronic or veteran homeless. Other communities have a three, five or ten year “plan” to end homelessness.

Perhaps it’s because the federal government has similar unbridled rhetoric.

But are such hopeful statements grounded in any form of reality? Remember that the number of homeless people is not static. It is very fluid, changing from day to day-even hourly. As homeless people get placed into housing, others individuals are thrust into homelessness.

Okay, so do you let people starve on the streets? It’s important to say that homelessness is more than just drugs and alcohol. People who use neither become homeless, simply because of illness, poverty or job loss.

“It angers me that the homeless population is so often pigeon-holed into those categories. There are also many young people who become homeless when their families throw them away for being gay and/or transgender.”

National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty Overview

James Garland of Tulelake News
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Email: tulelakenews@yahoo.com
Cell # (530) 708-7852

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Homeless Helping Homeless HHH.

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