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Shelters For Klamath Tribal Elders, Homeless Rural Residents Funded By Oregon’s Project Turnkey

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POETRY

POETRY

Ashelter for tribal elders in southern Oregon, a safe resting space for domestic violence survivors on the southwest coast and Malheur County’s first year-round shelter are among the latest projects funded under a state program that pays to turn vacant buildings into homeless shelters.

Oregon has spent nearly $125 million since 2020 to turn vacant hotels and motels into shelters through the Project Turnkey program, adding more than 900 rooms to help hundreds of people get off the streets. The four new projects announced Tuesday by the Oregon Community Foundation, a Portland-based entity that oversees the funding, aim to help more homeless residents in rural Oregon. The projects receive state funding and are managed by local governments or nonprofits.

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About 18,000 people are homeless statewide, and about 62% of homeless Oregonians lack shelter, according to data collected by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Gov. Tina Kotek has set a goal of getting 1,200 more homeless Oregonians off the streets by January 2024.

The largest grant announced on May 31 was for the Housing Authority of Malheur and Harney Counties, which received more than $4 million to buy and renovate a 17-unit apartment building in Ontario. It will become transitional housing, with a focus on serving people who are chronically homeless, families with children, elderly people and people with disabilities.

It’s Malheur County’s first year-round shelter, Housing Authority Executive Director Kristy Rodriguez said.

“This has been a long-time goal for many service providers in our area to watch our most vulnerable populations thrive and succeed to stabilization,” she said.

The Klamath Tribes in southern Oregon received just more than $2.3 million to buy and renovate Melita’s Hotel and RV Park, just southeast of Crater Lake National Park in Chiloquin. The motel will provide housing for tribal elders, and a restaurant on site will be turned into a soup kitchen and community gathering space. Eventually, the tribe plans to turn the empty RV sites into transitional housing.

Klamath Tribes Chairman Clayton Dumont said in a statement that the new shelter is part of a larger effort to ensure tribal members have warm, dry places to sleep. He noted that one in four Native Americans live below the poverty line.

“In our Klamath, Modoc, Yahooskin cultures, elders are our most important teachers. They are how we know who we are,” Dumont said. “Thus, tribal elders who are without or in danger

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