{"id":25815,"date":"2023-09-11T13:30:06","date_gmt":"2023-09-11T13:30:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mormonmediareviews.com\/?p=25815"},"modified":"2023-09-11T13:30:06","modified_gmt":"2023-09-11T13:30:06","slug":"denver-mayor-mike-johnstons-micro-communities-explained","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mormonmediareviews.com\/politics\/denver-mayor-mike-johnstons-micro-communities-explained\/","title":{"rendered":"Denver Mayor Mike Johnstons micro-communities explained"},"content":{"rendered":"

Denver Mayor Mike Johnston has his sales pitch for homeless micro-communities down pat. But in some neighborhoods near proposed sites, the plan is being met with confusion, suspicion and, at times, misconceptions.<\/p>\n

The micro-community concept was the keystone of Johnston’s campaign promise to end unsheltered homelessness in the city in the next four years. Now, in the first major step toward meeting that promise, it’s the centerpiece of his rush to provide shelter to 1,000 people living on the streets before the year is out.<\/p>\n

As his administration works to beat the clock, Johnston has argued his case for the temporary housing sites at more than a dozen town hall-style meetings over the last few weeks.<\/p>\n

The Denver Post has gathered answers to several questions about the micro-communities plan as work continues to open the first sites.<\/p>\n

What is a micro-community?<\/h4>\n

It’s a temporary community set up for homeless people using quick-to-build structures and on-site services. Under Johnston’s plan, micro-communities are intended to enable the moving of entire encampments of people living on the streets to a safer, more stable place while the city works long-term to build permanent supportive housing.<\/p>\n

The idea builds off of — and scales up — the tiny-home village-model pioneered in Denver by the nonprofit Colorado Village Collaborative. It relies on a housing-first approach to tackle unsheltered homelessness in Denver, which this year ballooned to include 1,423 people living on the streets, according to the latest point-in-time count performed in January.<\/p>\n

Why use this model?<\/h4>\n

Johnston has said permanent housing, such as a home or an apartment, is the end goal of his initiative. But micro-communities will provide a stopgap that can benefit both unhoused people and the nearby neighborhoods.<\/p>\n

The unsheltered residents who move into these communities will step up a rung on the ladder of housing stability while the city at large benefits from fewer people living in tents on streets or sidewalks. <\/p>\n

“Tiny homes offer a locked door, privacy, security, a physical address, access to (a) shower, bathroom (and) kitchen, and they’re units that don’t take $500,000 and three years to build,” Johnston said at a town hall last month. “And they come in a community that offers wraparound services, offers mental health support, addiction treatment (and) workforce training. So you’re getting back on your feet (and) getting stabilized.”<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

Don’t these already exist with ice fishing tents?<\/h4>\n

The Colorado Village Collaborative operates three temporary Safe Outdoor Spaces in the city today. Those sites are largely made up of ice fishing tents. Johnston has said the new micro-communities will not use tents.<\/p>\n

He and other city officials favor more substantial — and more expensive — temporary housing units. So do federal record keepers. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development classifies people living in “camping grounds” as unsheltered for the purpose of point-in-time counts, including folks living in Safe Outdoor Spaces.<\/p>\n

Johnston’s plan calls for the use of hard-structured tiny homes and prefabricated Pallet shelters, which are so named because they are shipped in pieces on wooden pallets.<\/p>\n

How many micro-communities, and where will they go?<\/h4>\n

Johnston hopes to open seven to 10 micro-communities, along with hotels converted into shelter space. He has said his goal is to “decentralize” homeless services in Denver — long an objective for city officials, at least in theory.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

The mayor aims to choose at least one site in each of Denver’s 11 City Council districts. So far, that goal is a work in progress. Last month, the mayor’s office released a preliminary list of 11 properties, two of which will be hotel conversions. The other nine are parcels of vacant land that could host micro-communities. The list did not include sites in council districts 1, 2 or 5 (in northwest, southwest and east Denver), but Johnston emphasized that property talks are ongoing in those parts of the city.<\/p>\n

How were sites chosen?<\/h4>\n

According to the Johnston administration, the criteria used to vet the preliminary list include:<\/p>\n