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News and Updates

City of Seattle to locate temporary homeless shelter in University District

UPDATE: City of Seattle staff held a public information session Wednesday, April 26, in UW’s Fisheries Sciences auditorium on Boat St. in West Campus. Several UW students, staff and faculty attended, including parents with children in UW’s nearby childcare centers. At the meeting the shelter operator, Operation NightWatch, said they will not place people registered as sex offenders at the Boat St. shelter. City staff identified May 8 as the likely operational date and committed to relocating the shelter by the end of August so development can begin on the new Portage Bay Park.

University of Washington students, faculty and staff have made many contributions to understanding and addressing the homelessness crisis in Seattle and elsewhere. Our community’s engagement with this issue, including your support for Tent City 3, which recently concluded their successful stay on our campus, has been inspiring.

In this context, we want to make our community aware that the City of Seattle is planning to locate a temporary men’s homeless shelter at the Bryants Building adjacent to the University’s West Campus, possibly as soon as the end of April. Without question, the homelessness crisis has many complexities and no simple solutions, but the City’s plans for this shelter may raise some concerns, so we want to share the information we have about what lies ahead.

The Bryants Building was formerly the UWPD station and was transferred from the UW to the City to be turned into a park. It is still slated for demolition and the men’s shelter will be moved by the end of September to allow the park to be built. The shelter is designated for single, adult men to stay between the hours of 9 p.m. and 7 a.m. with a capacity of about 75 individuals. Occupants must secure a voucher to stay there — in other words, drop-ins are not permitted. The shelter’s operator, Operation Nightwatch, has a good track record operating at other locations in Seattle.

However, President Cauce has shared some concerns with the City of Seattle about the appropriateness of this type of shelter near certain campus programs, as well as the accelerated process by which the City selected this location and the lack of engagement that process has afforded our campus community. When the UW agreed to host Tent City 3, our process for defining project goals, operator expectations, conduct rules and choosing an appropriate site took place over many months and put a premium on feedback from students, faculty, staff and neighbors.  The City’s site selection process for this temporary shelter was not as rigorous or deliberate.

In addition, this shelter will not screen for sex offender status, in contrast to the criteria for staying at Tent City 3. Although this is a difficult issue when it comes to safe shelter options for homeless men convicted of crimes resulting in sex offender status, the safety and security of our campus and the people who use it are the UW’s paramount concern, so we feel it’s important to share this.

As citizens and neighbors, we recognize the crisis we’re facing as a community and the difficulties we face in addressing it with equity and compassion. Our Regional & Community Relations team has been in ongoing discussions with the City about this plan and will remain actively engaged throughout the process.

If you have questions about this issue feel free to contact to contact the City of Seattle Human Services Department at 206-386-1001. The UW’s Office of Regional & Community Relations can be reached at regional@uw.edu.

CUCAC Meeting Agenda, April 2017

This is to notify you that the City of Seattle/University of Washington Community Advisory Committee (CUCAC) will hold its next meeting.

Date:                     Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Time:                    6:30 – 8:30 PM

Location:             UW Tower

4333 Brooklyn Avenue, 22nd Floor

Seattle, WA 98105

Agenda here

Tent City 3 concluding successful stay at the UW

March 15, 2017

Ana Mari Cauce

This weekend, our neighbors in Tent City 3 (TC3) depart for their next location, this time in Skyway, having completed their planned 90-day stay here on the UW’s Seattle campus. The way our community embraced our neighbors and the learning and human experiences that took place have been fantastic to witness, and I want to thank everyone whose planning and hard work went into making their stay a successful one.

When students, alumni and TC3 residents in the Tent City Collective first proposed hosting a tent city on campus, a key factor in the decision-making process was whether there would be clear connections to the UW’s academic mission. That’s why I’m so pleased by the number of faculty and students who stepped forward to make this hosting a part of their teaching and learning.

At least eight courses in disciplines including public policy, environmental science, English and severalhealth fields, as well as via the Honors Program, formally engaged with TC3 during the last three months. That’s in addition to other ways the UW and TC3 communities connected, ranging from clinics and outreach provided by students from Nursing, Dentistry, MEDEX and Public Health, to a drop-in art studio, to the many shared meals made possible by a range of units, professional organizations, student groups and individuals. You can read about many of these connections on the Addressing Homelessness page.

The stay faced challenges, not the least of which being the unusually cold winter. But those were no match for the openheartedness and ingenuity of individuals in departments from Facilities Services to ICA and IMA, the last of which opened up the Waterfront Activities Center as a warming center during the coldest part of the season.

One of the questions I received even as TC3 was arriving in December was “When will the UW host again?” Key to answering that question will be student involvement. The Tent City Collective did its homework and gathered support on and off campus before presenting a proposal. Students remained engaged and have done tremendous work, in addition to their class loads, in order to make the stay a success. Future hosting will be contingent on having that same level of student engagement. It’ll also be guided in part by the results of an evaluation – we are academics, after all, and evaluating a program is vital to improving it in the future – that a School of Public Health program evaluation course is conducting. You can contribute to that evaluation by taking this survey.

In the meantime, please remember that TC3’s residents – and the many other individuals and families in our community without reliable shelter – are our neighbors, wherever they may spend the night. For those of us who connected with TC3’s residents, whether for a day or a quarter, it is a lesson we will not soon forget – and one that I hope will lead to action to finally end the crisis of homelessness in our community.