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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (April 13, 2018)
Street Roots • April 13-19, 2018 Rural Housing Page 11 RURAL HOUSING, from page 10 Pointe, a five-story building in downtown Bend with retail businesses on the lower level and four stories on one and two- bedroom apartments, as a model for affordable housing for the future. “We need housing for the workforce, period,” Callicott said. “We need affordable housing for people of all economic strata. You can t build a single-family home for a family that makes $37,000. It does have to be HUD housing. It has to be smart.” s Central Oregon government and public policy continues identifying ways to incentivize more construction, there is a growing chorus of service providers, outreach workers and activists who want to create a city-sanctioned camp or tiny house village for at least a portion of Central Oregon’s homeless to safely camp and access services. On Feb. 23, Sally Pfeifer, the owner of the drug and alcohol counseling service Pfiefer & Associates, started a warming shelter for up to 30 people in her offices. The warming shelter is only open when nighttime temperatures dip below 32 degrees. It’s bare bones: mats on the floor from 8 p.m. until 7 a.m. in a space used for group therapy during the day. On March 7, she sent an email to dozens of elected officials, social service providers and advocates. “Please take this all into consideration as you walk around downtown for your evening fun and meals,” Pfeifer wrote. “Are there less people to walk over? Are there less frightened tourists and community members? Is there more time for officers to do other things than chase homeless people from one door jamb to another, which they hate doing? “Everyone has voiced their support for a solution to the homeless crisis,” the email continued. “We are now getting a taste of how a homeless village could benefit the community of B end.... There are solutions.” More than anything, people in Central Oregon fear becoming another Aspen, Colo., - the chichi resort and mountain town “where no cop, no firefighter, any service (worker) can live in the community that they’re serving,” Callicott said. “That’s ridiculous.” A lower incomes. Callicott, of Five Talent Software, would not disclose the average salary his software developers make, saying it is “highly confidential ” But he did say they are “very well paid” with salaries in a range typical for software developers, with $60,000 a year as a starting salary. “It’s not the kind of position you expect, in Oregon, would have a difficult time affording a home,” he said. The software developer that Callicott offered his home to was ultimately able to find a home and stay in Central Oregon. Rob Duvalle, the human resources director for the City of Bend, has had similar conversations to Callicott’s. One employee of the city of Bend moved to the area from across the country and lived with friends for months. “Where do you live?” Duvalle remembers asking the person. “‘I don’t really know,’” was the response. The city of Bend has lost more than a handful of employees due to housing concerns, including a utility worker, Duvalle said. The base salary for such a position is $20.10 an hour. “That’s not a been unable to hire certain employees who have wanted to move here. It has negatively effected our ability to secure talent.” Questions from job candidates about housing are “frequent,” Duvalle said, and that his staff have started asking candidates during the interview process if they are aware of the region’s housing market and whether they’ve started looking for housing. “We make sure they’ve done their homework,” he said. “The last thing we want is a great candidate that we love, and then all of a sudden they call us and say they can’t show up.” S t Charles Health System, which operates hospitals in Bend, Redmond, more and more recruits are turning down job offers because they cannot find homes they can afford. “We’ve had people accept offers, be very excited, with full intentions of coming here, and then (start) their A few years ago, Duvalle said, the home search ... and they can’t afford it prospect of living in Redmond and she said. commuting to Bend to work would have The positions most affected at the been a “deal breaker” in recruitment hospital, Barry said, are surgical technicians and conversations. certified nursing Aycock, of the assistants (CNAs). Central Oregon "It's a hurdle right now. Both those Intergovernmental We've lost employees that positions, according Council, said he is to Barry, pay $25 an beginning to hour. cer- investigate employer- The hospital is assisted housing programs, which Minnesota and other communities around ablllty to secure talent the country use. ROB DUVALLE Such a program C IT Y O F B E N D either provides payment loan programs that help employees make a down payment for a home. area. “That’s a lot of time, effort and money, and then we’re back to square one,” Barry said. “There’s not always a backup candidate.” The hospital has begun to rely on on-call surgical techs and nurses who travel to work at the hospital. They’re a more expensive labor pool, Barry said, because they don’t earn benefits and the hospital must pay for their temporary housing while they work for the hospital. “It’s a short-term fix, and it’s not what you want to depend on,” she said. Barry said that St. Charles is beginning to discuss how to encourage lower-skilled workers, such as in the city of Sisters. The city contributed $300,000, or 6 percent of its general fund, toward the project. Brant Kucera, the city manager of affordable to all income levels is not only necessarily for the many service workers who work in Sisters, but community. “We have our school district to sustain,” he said. “In the future, we need people with children to be moving here. The only way to do that is making Bend - that’s not a big deal to me. I want them to live in Sisters first “Communities are made up of people from all walks of life,” he continued. “We need to make sure that, when we