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Blanchet House workers distribute cool drinks to people experiencing homelessness during the June heat wave in Portland, Oregon. Images courtesy of Blanchet House.
But serving people experiencing homelessness isn’t just about having supplies on hand, Kerman said, it’s about meeting people where they are: Even if support services like shelters and cooling centers were opened up quickly for people, there could still be a plethora of reasons people without shelter would be unlikely to use those support services.
“These environments can be really triggering,” Kerman said. “They’re noisy and crowded, don’t offer the best support for people experiencing chronic mental health or physical illnesses, and leave people with the fear they’ll have to leave all their belongings behind on the streets,” especially because police officers have been known to confiscate people’s possessions and clear housing encampments.
But even though cooling centers aren’t ideal environments for everyone, having access to them can be life-saving — especially with more heat potentially on the way. Regional temperatures usually peak in July — a fact of which Kerman and other advocates for homeless populations are fully aware.
“There will be more heatwaves, if not this year then next, and there will very likely be dangerous wildfire seasons,” Kerman said. “And people are trying to say that the worst of the pandemic is behind us, but for people who’ve lived on the street this whole year and experienced both the climate crisis and this health crisis, things may never get back to normal.”
This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/cities/portland-heat-wave-homeless-support/.
Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org
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