³ÉÈËXÕ¾

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Nearly 200 refugees relocated from Kent encampment to temporary housing

Sep 26, 2024, 11:17 AM | Updated: 1:51 pm

kent encampment refugees...

The recently-cleared encampment in Kent. (Photo courtesy of ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ 7)

(Photo courtesy of ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ 7)

Nearly 200 refugees living in a homeless encampment in Kent were given a choice, according to a spokesperson with King County Executive Dow Constantine’s Office — board the bus and go to temporary housing or pack up and leave because the camp would be closed by the end of the day.

Police, translators and outreach workers arrived at the camp at approximately 7 a.m. Tuesday on Central Ave., where hundreds of refugees from Africa and South America have lived for months, awaiting housing and immigration officials to grant them asylum. According to the Office of King County Executive, those staying at the camp were told a community meeting would be held between 7:30 a.m. and 8 a.m. that morning to discuss future housing options.

Not all encampments are eyesores:’ Man’s makeshift White House catches the eye

“At the community meeting, asylum seekers were told that they were being transitioned to housing or temporary shelter if they chose to take it, but if not, the encampment was going to be closed later that day, and everyone would need to leave,” Amy Enbysk, press secretary for the Office of King County Executive Dow Constantine, told MyNorthwest.

Thirty-one pregnant women and families went to a Thrive Center facility in Tacoma, operated by Thrive International. Outreach workers with Thrive International were also at the encampment helping move the refugees.

A spokesperson with the executive’s office said their stay is funded through at least June 30, but that Thrive will be working to secure government funding for a longer period of time.

“By then, the state will be further established in distributing and supporting programs funded by the $25 million allocation they approved earlier this year,” the spokesperson said in an email. “This extended timeline offer stability for those navigating the process of getting settled here in Washington.”

The rest of the 192 refugees — single men and women — were sent to a hotel. The county hasn’t stated specifically where, as of this reporting, but the funding for their hotel will only last for five days. The county told ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio it’s trying to find longer-term housing in the meantime.

Individuals from other locations arrived at the encampment after the intake process had begun. Reasons remain unclear, but King County officials believe it’s because they hoped to be connected to housing or resources.

“Unfortunately, we only had enough resources to provide housing or temporary shelter to people who were residing at the Kent encampment and who had been identified and added to the intake process list, so no one who was left behind was residing at the Kent encampment,” Enbysk said.

Food is finished:Refugees in Kent call for help as health, food struggles remain

A refugee and advocate outside the camp told ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio on Tuesday there were people who lived there and had been away while the meeting happened, only to miss out on the housing offer.

Enbysk said workers with Thrive collected contact information for everyone who arrived afterward “to help refer them to the anticipated state program that will be up and running this fall.” The program — a described “hub and spoke model” with the Washington State Office of Refugee and Immigrant Assistance to connect immigrants to services — is still in the process of being set up and is expected to be launched sometime in October, an official with the Washington Department of Social and Health Services told ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio.

³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio has reached out to KCRHA to inquire about availability.

Contributing: Sam Campbell and Luke Duecy, ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio; Frank Sumrall, MyNorthwest

James Lynch is a reporter at ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio. You can read more of James’ stories here. Follow James on , or email him here.

MyNorthwest News

Seattle police are investigating a shooting near Franklin High School in the 2800 block of Rainier ...

Frank Lenzi

Man shoots suspected burglar at Seattle apartment

A man shot a suspected burglar in the leg early Friday morning at an apartment complex in Seattle.

11 hours ago

Bernese Mountain Dog...

Frank Lenzi

VIDEO: Tacoma Police save Bernese Mountain Dog stuck on rocks

A Bernese Mountain Dog had a ruff day last week. It somehow got stuck on some cold, wet rocks at Tacoma Chinese Reconciliation Park. Police came and saved the dog.

12 hours ago

PETA UW...

Julia Dallas

UW to release names of animal committee members to PETA, raising research concerns

UW will have to disclose the names of its animal welfare committee to PETA after a 3-year-long legal battle.

13 hours ago

Clark County Sheriff - Cowlitz Tribe police chief...

James Lynch

Cowlitz Tribe police chief found dead from self-inflicted gunshot, tied to possible sex crime

Cowlitz Tribe Police Chief Charles Gardiner found dead from self-inflicted gunshot, investigation linked to possible sex crime.

13 hours ago

Princess Diana...

Julia Dallas

MOPOP hosts ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ chance to see Princess Diana memorabilia

MOPOP is offering a rare opportunity to see Princess Diana's memorabilia before it's sold at auction.

14 hours ago

gorilla 100 men seattle seahawk...

MyNorthwest Staff

100 men vs. a gorilla? Former Seattle Seahawk claims you only need 9

The 100 men versus one gorilla debate is back on the internet and Luke Wilson claims we might want to thank the Seahawks for it.

14 hours ago

Nearly 200 refugees relocated from Kent encampment to temporary housing