The Daily of the University of Washington

Tent City III looks for new home


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After months of planning and preparation, the group attempting to bring Tent City III (TC3) to campus received news from President Mark Emmert last Wednesday that their request to host the homeless encampment had been denied.


Photo by Thom Weinstein.

After spending one month on the sports field at St. Therese Church in the Madrona neighborhood, Tent City III must relocate Aug. 22.



Photo by File Photo.

UW junior Abbey Pearl proposes hosting Tent City III to the Faculty Senate May 21.



Photo by Thom Weinstein.

Residents Ed Champagne, left, and Shawna Fuller both moved from Colorado and have been living at Tent City III for a month.


The Students for Civic Engagement on Homelessness is a group that was established to continue a proposal made by students in the “Community Development for Health” class at the university. The initiative was intended to bring TC3, a homeless encampment of up to 100 individuals, to campus for a period of up to 90 days. The request to host the encampment was sent to President Mark Emmert June 12 and was rejected July 29.

The Associated Students of the University of Washington (ASUW), the Graduate and Professional Student Senate (GPSS) and the Faculty Senate passed resolutions in support of hosting TC3 earlier this year. While Emmert acknowledged this support, he heard arguments from the opposition as well.

His e-mailed letter, stamped 2:30 p.m., July 29, states, “I have reviewed your proposal for the University of Washington to host a tent city for people experiencing homelessness, along with the resolutions supporting the proposal from the ASUW, the GPSS and the Faculty Senate. In addition, I have received comments both supporting and opposing the idea. Though a case can be made for doing so, I have decided the university is not the right place to host a tent city, and I am therefore denying the request.”

Abbey Pearl, president of the civic engagement group, expressed her thoughts on the letter’s contents.

“It is very disappointing that the president has such little faith in the students, faculty and staff of the University of Washington,” she said. “Although the campus is a complex and diverse place, I believe the individuals who converge on the campus every day have the potential to see past the differences in others, can overcome the complexity of the situation and embrace the challenge of hosting Tent City III. In doing so, I believe these stakeholders would be enriched by the experience.”

According to the civic engagement group, Emmert cited concerns with management of TC3 in his decision to deny the proposal.

“The university is a diverse community of 60,000 people who converge on our relatively compact campus every day,” Emmert said in his letter. “To introduce a tent city into this mix would compound the complexity of our daily activity in ways that would further complicate the business of the University.”

TC3’s open-door policy has raised concerns regarding how the lives of the residents would be impacted by the large student population of the university if the school hosted the encampment. Seattle University was the last collegiate institution to host TC3, with a student body roughly one-sixth the size of the UW’s.

“In our meetings with the administration, they asked a few questions they felt were not adequately addressed in the initial report,” said Hunter Marshall, the treasurer of the student group, in a press release. “We were in the process of answering these questions and adding them to the report when we received this disheartening response.”

TC3 is currently stationed at St. Therese Church in Madrona, a residential neighborhood in East Central Seattle, and their two-month stay at the church will end Aug. 22. Lantz Rowland, a TC3 resident, said the camp hasn’t gotten confirmation yet as to the camp’s next location.

“We got some candidates, but none of them have locked in yet,” Rowland said. Rowland was not at liberty to say who those candidates were.

While the campus group is disappointed by the setback, the members intend to continue educating the university community about homelessness this fall with a teach-in event and an art exhibit.

“Although we received an unfavorable response at this time,” Pearl said, “it does not mean that the issue or even the idea to host a tent city goes away.”

Reach editors Eric Staples and Lexie Krell at news@dailyuw.com.


5 Comments

#1 Dan M.
(UW Campus | UW Community)

on August 7, 2009 at 3:09 p.m.
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Where did all the comments go? Is this censorship, or some 'policy' decision?

Please join us!

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid...

#2 Clifford D.
(Kirkland, WA)

on August 7, 2009 at 3:31 p.m.
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Dan:

http://dailyuw.com/2009/7/31/presiden...

Great job at trying to blow the whistle on censorship, you blabbering idiot.

#3 Russ W.
(Redmond, WA)

on August 8, 2009 at 1:43 p.m.
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Haha.

#4 Brittany B.
(Seattle, WA | UW Community)

on August 9, 2009 at 2:20 a.m.
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Why the need for two articles?

#5 Clifford D.
(Seattle, WA)

on August 11, 2009 at 11:44 p.m.
Report this comment

@Brittany - most likely, the first was rushed online after the announcement, and the second (the one above) was the one that made it into the weekly paper.


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