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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 2000)
13 FTTT7TT7RTJnews amela Alvey is up to her wrists in pot ting soil. She is crouched in a field of fertilizer, in front of a new two-story yellow home in Milwaukie, Ore., which emits the fresh odors of recent construction. In a few weeks, Alvey will wel come her first two residents, a man and a woman living with AIDS-related illnesses. Alvey is the director of Swan House, a new specialized adult foster care home to serve low- income individuals with HIV/AIDS. As she makes final arrangements for the Swan House opening, Alvey’s most urgent desire is to cultivate a healthy relationship with her neighbors as she cultivates healthy plants in her garden—but the growing is a little slow going. “I found a note that said ‘fuck you’ on the mailbox today,” she says regretfully. “Right there, right on No. 7. It looks like a child’s hand writing.” Rick Skidmore, the minister next door at the queer-ffiendly Milwaukie United Church of Christ, has stopped by to see the note. “It certainly seems like a child’s mentality,” he says. Alvey seems bothered, but not daunted by the message. In actuality, she believes the note might have been written as a response to her being an out lesbian, not because ¿he’s running an HIV/AIDS-related facility. (As Just Out went to press, Alvey said she learned—from the mail carrier—that many peo like Swan House for a while. Eight years ago, she ple along her street had received a similar note bought a tum-of-the-century home in Portland, that day.) hoping to transform it into her own nursing Since builders began constructing the Swan facility. She postponed the idea when she real House late last year, Alvey has made herself ized how many structural changes the house available to address neighbors’ concerns. She would need to undergo. says a mother of a 2-year-old stopped by to get Alvey is an HIV/AIDS-experienced regis information about the soon-to-be residents of tered nurse who worked previously at Our the foster home. She told the woman that Swan House of Portland, a facility serving people with House will be home to individuals living with AIDS. HIV or AIDS, but will shelter no secrets. She says the position at Swan House became When the establishment is up and running, available when Arthur Buck, the director of with all five bedrooms filled, Alvey says, the res Clackamas County AIDS Relief Effort, visited a idents will hold barbecues regularly and extend meeting at Our House. He asked the staff who would be available to manage a new foster care invitations to the whole neighborhood. According to Alvey, a steady flow of support facility in Milwaukie. Alvey didn’t hesitate to accept the position. and an inundation of donations have character Swan House is a modem establishment. The ized the last few months. The living room is a comfortable hive of sofas. Someone recently building is fully handicap-accessible, with a large kitchen, living room and activities room. donated a copy machine. Swan House looks like an established living Five bedrooms extend from the main body of space, but the only items not donated are the the house, each one with its own bathroom and outside deck area. beds. “It’s rare for homes like these to give each “Everything on my wish list has come true," she says. “The other week I said, ‘Wouldn’t it be person their own bath and deck,” Alvey points great if we got a TV in here?’ and a few days out. What’s more rare is that Swan House will later, it was donated.” Alvey, who has been involved in HIV work open its doors completely debt-free. The proper since she was 17, has wanted to run an operation ty was donated by Eunice Swan (hence the L iving with HIV, L iving T ogether P y cu Swan House, an HIV/AIDS foster home, prepares to open in Milwaukie by Katy Davidson • '■<> '...... s Pamela Alvey at Swan House home’s name), an avid churchgoer at the next- door house of worship who had a relative die from an AIDS-related illness. Alvey says Swan wanted to donate the plot to any organization that worked for AIDS relief. Northwest Housing Alternatives and CCARE built the home; the funding was pro vided by Housing Opportunities for People with AIDS and others. Because Swan House will have a small num ber of residents, Alvey believes the home should be run with cooperation and communal princi ples. For example, the residents will collectively decide what they want to eat for dinner, and then they will cook it together. The resident council will also decide what activities everyone will do. “We will run on a social model,” Alvey says. “We want to encourage people to live together.” This idea will remain the dri ving force behind Swan House. Whereas Our House is more hos picelike, with a registered nurse on duty around the clock, Swan House will be more of a stopover point for individuals coming out of the hospital or out of drug treatment. There will even be an occupational therapist to help the residents get back into the workforce. With respect to Our House, Alvey says, “There’s a place for both of us here.” The final item on Alvey’s wish list is a slew of volunteers. Just like the myriad donations she received during the last few weeks, Alvey believes volunteers will eventually show up. “People want to help,” she says. ■ To volunteer at S wan H ouse , ccdl (503) 422-7410. K aty D avidson is a Just Out staff writer. She can be reached at katy@justout. com. 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