成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Third Door Coalition plans to end chronic homelessness in King County in 5 years

May 12, 2019, 7:36 AM | Updated: May 13, 2019, 6:43 am

homelessness...

Chad Mackay is the co-founder of Third Door Coalition, which is working on a solution to chronic homelessness in Seattle. (Photo courtesy Fire & Vine Hospitality)

(Photo courtesy Fire & Vine Hospitality)

Local business owner Chad Mackay came home to his kids playing “homeless camp” in the basement one day, and knew things had to change. It hit him that he couldn鈥檛 let this be the new normal for his kids growing up in a city he loves.

RELATED: Eastside鈥檚 Congregations for the Homeless gets boost from developer

Luckily, he heard Sara Rankin, an associate professor at Seattle University School of Law, speak about homelessness at a Visit Seattle board meeting. She explained to Mackay, head of Fire & Vine Hospitality, and other business leaders about her research with the Homeless Rights Advocacy Project, and why she鈥檚 optimistic about a solution.

Rankin described the current system as broken, suggesting that coordinating with businesses, researchers, and service providers could help reset the conversation, and finally solve the region’s chronic homeless crisis.

鈥淲e got together and started talking about how that would work,鈥 Mackay said.

That was in May of 2018. By September, they had formed the and were already holding their first meetings.

The group was intentionally kept small in size, but packs a powerful punch, among the likes of David Blanford; Vice President of Public Affairs at Visit Seattle; Noah Fay, Director of Housing Programs with Downtown Emergency Service Center; Matt Galvin, co-owner of Pagliacci Pizza and Marina Bakery; Paul Lambros, CEO of Plymouth Housing; Howard Wright, founder of Seattle Hospitality Group; and Jeri Andrews, co-founder of The Lion鈥檚 Den Seattle.

鈥淎 third door could be opened which is around collaboration, which is around data, which is around policy, not politics, in that we鈥檙e using evidence-based solutions to figure out how to tackle chronic homelessness,鈥 Mackay explained.

Third Door鈥檚 strategy is to provide permanent supportive housing for the chronic homelessness, which is defined as sleeping in places not suitable for humans, staying in shelters for longer than a year, and living with a disabling condition such as a health or emotional condition. The coalition says people experiencing chronic homelessness only make up 29 percent of the entire homeless population, but they’re the most visible, the most costly, the most vulnerable,聽 and often the most polarizing.

While critics argue housing won鈥檛 make a difference, Mackay says it鈥檚 a cheaper and more effective solution than how local government is currently managing the issue. The coalition plans to unveil its official plan this summer.

鈥淭o solve chronic homelessness, you have to house people, so that you can get them in a state when you can actually provide them services,鈥 Mackay said. 鈥淭he uptake on supportive services in supportive housing is by far larger than the uptake of people that are chronically homeless and they鈥檙e offered services on the street.鈥

As a business owner and Seattle taxpayer, Mackay firmly believes that their plan is aggressive enough to make a major impact on city streets within the next five years. And at a much cheaper price tag.

Managing versus solving homelessness

He recommends that anyone still skeptical read for The New Yorker, titled 鈥淢illion-Dollar Murray,鈥 about a homeless man who died on Reno鈥檚 streets. It concludes that the resources dedicated to Murray鈥檚 well-being cost the city a million dollars.

Mackay estimates it costs Seattle and King County $50,000 to $80,000 a year in emergency services to keep one individual on the streets. It would only cost about $20,000 a year for supportive housing under Third Door Coalition鈥檚 plan.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a waste of resources to send them to drug rehab, try to get them into mental health treatment in the terms of outpatient treatment — when they go back to living in a pretty deteriorated situation 鈥 If you put them in housing and wrap them with those services, they start to rebuild their lives,鈥 Mackay said. 鈥淯ltimately, it will save taxpayers money.鈥

How to fix chronic homelessness

How exactly they accomplish that will be detailed in the coalition鈥檚 plan. But in a nutshell, Mackay said they鈥檙e working on innovating funding, different ways to partner, new strategies for cutting down on excessive construction costs, enticing private dollars with public matching, and delivering a faster timeline for results.

Mackay said that there are some tactics that are already queued up and wouldn鈥檛 require too much involvement to implement. Other tactics are more long-term, and require work with the county, city, and state Legislature.

鈥淭here are some innovative construction techniques and the ability to drive down the cost per key 鈥 cost per unit 鈥 that we want to continue to push forward and get some prototypes done in a relatively short fashion,鈥 he said.

Some of that is new construction and some of it is existing housing stock. They鈥檝e been working with real estate agents to determine the true cost.

Impact of local businesses

With help from the private sector, Mackay also expects they鈥檒l get more accurate data about the migration of people experiencing homelessness, and who they really are.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think people believe the reporting numbers that are out there,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o let鈥檚 have business be part of developing that data analysis and reporting mechanism to test, monitor, and benchmark the actual results.鈥

If businesses put money in, they should get something in return, and Mackay says that鈥檚 a reduction in chronic homelessness and increase in street civility.

鈥淭he companies are not the enemy,鈥 Mackay said. 鈥淭he companies and employers in this town, in this region, are part of the solution.鈥

Mackay said that the city of Seattle knows his group is working toward a solution. He believes Third Door is the only group working on chronic homelessness with the expectation of a major impact. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e further down the path than the current efforts are.鈥

Mackay says the greatest way to support Third Door Coalition鈥檚 efforts is to understand what chronic homelessness truly means, and to also realize that there are solutions to move the needle.

鈥淎nd it鈥檒l ultimately reduce the cost and give the city back to us.鈥

MyNorthwest is spotlighting local businesses that are making a difference in the lives of people who are experiencing homelessness. If you know of a business that you think is creating solutions, please email us at聽feedback@mynorthwest.com聽with details.

Please follow our Community Guidelines

MyNorthwest News

everett shooting...

Frank Sumrall

Everett shooting leaves man injured, no suspects in custody

The Everett Police Department is investigating a shooting last weekend that sent a man to the hospital.

34 minutes ago

snoqualmie casino...

Frank Sumrall

Snoqualmie Casino’s $400M expansion adds hotel, convention center, and more

Snoqualmie Casino officially launched its $400 million expansion Friday, centered around the opening of a聽10-story hotel with 210 rooms.

1 hour ago

oil spill puget sound...

Julia Dallas

Shipping company fined for 199-gallon Puget Sound oil spill

A commercial shipping company was fined for an oil spill that released 199 gallons of waste oil into the Puget Sound in 2023.

2 hours ago

Investigators want to track down this armed-robbery suspect who pulled a gun and demanded money at ...

Tom Brock

Casino armed robbery suspect caught on camera

A would-be armed robber left a casino empty handed this weekend, after being told there was nothing there to steal.

18 hours ago

The U.S. Coast Guard tows a disabled, 97-foot fishing boat with three people aboard, after the vess...

Tom Brock

Coast Guard rescues disabled fishing boat adrift 95 miles from Oregon coast

The Coast Guard sent an airplane, a helicopter and two boats to rescue three people on a fishing boat 95 miles off the coast of Oregon last week.

20 hours ago

Spokane County Sheriff鈥檚 Office Sergeant Kenneth Salas, 59, killed in the line of duty Saturday. ...

Tom Brock

Spokane County Sheriff’s sergeant struck and killed on I-90 near Cheney

A horrible accident has taken the life of a Spokane County Sheriff鈥檚 sergeant.

22 hours ago

Third Door Coalition plans to end chronic homelessness in King County in 5 years