Denver clears homeless camp near downtown post office as part of Johnston initiative

City crews moved more than 100 people out of a homeless encampment near the post office at 20th and Curtis streets downtown Thursday and into an east Denver hotel that has been converted into a shelter, officials confirmed.

It was the fourth and, so far, the largest action at an encampment yet as part of Mayor Mike Johnston’s House 1,000 homelessness initiative. With another mass relocation is planned in the coming days at an encampment near East 48th Avenue and Colorado Boulevard, administration officials say the city is on track to shelter more than 500 people by the middle of next week as part of the effort that has been Johnston’s primary focus since he was sworn in in July.

“After we bring people indoors from these two encampments, we will be more than halfway to the mayor’s stated goal,” Johnston spokesman Jose Salas said.

The online dashboard tracking the administration’s progress showed that 317 people had been moved off the streets and into shelter or housing as of Thursday afternoon. That will be updated in the days ahead once the relocation work is complete, Salas said.

The Johnston administration previously carried out an encampment closure in the area of 20th and Curtis streets, relocating 61 people in that effort, which concluded Nov. 1, according to a new release at that time. Thursday’s action area was much larger, covering rights of way on both sides of 20th from Stout Street to Curtis and both sides of Curtis from 20th to Broadway. A map included as part of a legal notice providing residents with seven days’ warning of the action also showed 21st Street between Champa and Curtis as part of the cleanup area.

The city is still working on a final tally of how many people living in tents and other makeshift shelters in the area were relocated Thursday. Derek Woodbury, a spokesman with Denver’s Department of Housing Stability, said three bus trips were required to move everyone who accepted the shelter offer.

“Outreach staff worked in this area over the past several days. During this time, we identified well over 100 individuals for the move, and staff visited the encampment daily to provide housing-focused services as well as behavioral health, substance misuse, harm reduction and emergency medical services,” Woodbury said in an email.

The residents were moved to a former DoubleTree Hotel at 404 Quebec St. in Councilwoman Shontel Lewis’ District 8. Lewis appeared alongside Johnston this morning at a news conference

Lewis repeatedly has highlighted that her district is carrying the load of a House 1,000 effort, with multiple hotel properties being used as noncongregate shelters and a forthcoming micro-community in the parking lot of one of those hotels.

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Pioneer Newz is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment