My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
1. Kittitas County 5-Year Homelessness Plan 2025-2030
>
Materials
>
2026
>
homelessness-affordable-housing
>
1. Kittitas County 5-Year Homelessness Plan 2025-2030
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
4/10/2026 9:36:52 AM
Creation date
4/9/2026 2:33:57 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Web document
Title
Kittitas County 5-Year Homelessness Plan 2025-2030
Start Date
4/9/2026
Department
Information Technology
Author
Calvin Lee
Supplemental fields
Description
homelessness-affordable-housing
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
60
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Community Alembers: Participants felt that the problem is the same, with some saying it is a <br />tittte bit worse. Their opinions were primarity based on observations of peopte camping and <br />people continuing to use services. There was discussion about it being a more visibte probtem and <br />the loss of jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic and increased costs being contributing factors. <br />. "l hear about peopte camped along the river in different places...lt's possible there are <br />more of them.". "lt may be becoming more visible; there may be fewer peopte couch surfing and more <br />camping by the river." <br />. "Peopte lost jobs in the pandemic five years ago. Huge increases in food and utitity prices <br />have forced peopte into homelessness. And losing their jobs, obviousty." <br />Centrol Washington University: A[[ participants fett the hometessness probtem has gotten worse, <br />but also recognized that it is more visible as wett. There was discussion about potice involvement <br />in getting people who are homeless out of the community and the overatl increase in poverty. <br />. "Maybe they are more visible, or maybe they're not being kicked out as fast."o "...it's a matter of the potice actively keeping this probtem away from pubtic eye in a way <br />that is dehumanizing.". "There was a time when you wouldn't see much of it, but now for whatever reason there <br />are individuats asking forassistance at Fred Meyer, corners, streets, and stuff.". "Poverty in general is increasing, not just homelessness-everything is getting more <br />expensive, wages aren't going up, process, inftation. lt's harder for people to survive.". "Everything is expensive. Peopte are actually ctose to homelessness even if they have <br />stable emptoyment and housing." <br />Question 2: ln a community survey, behavioral heatth services and job <br />training and emptoyment services were listed as priorities for individuats <br />experiencing hometessness. Does this resonate with you? Are these <br />priorities? Why or why not? <br />People with Lived Experience: Generatty, participants agreed that these are common priorities. <br />Some mentioned currentty being in treatment for either substance use disorder or mentaI heatth <br />needs and the positive impact it has had on their situations. There was discussion about the need <br />to give peopte a chance regardtess of their behavioral heatth issues and reduce stigma. There was <br />concern about not being abte to access services if they are activety using. <br />. "With the income I'm receiving now and the mental heatth we're receiving, our scenario <br />has improved significantty. Those were the two big focuses: mental heatth and job <br />training. ". "...as long as addicts have a chance.... A tot of addicts are scared to ask for hetp to find <br />housing....lf people could just let go of what we think we know about addicts to giving <br />them a chance if they ask for hetp.". "l don't know if we woutd have been carried through the system if the restrictions had <br />been higher. We probabty woutd have gone back to the care and started camping again." <br />Service Providers: Participants fett that yes, these are priorities, but housing and basic needs <br />must be addressed first. One participant indicated from personal experience that emptoyment <br />6
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.