Tag: microvillage program community planning workshop

Planning with Empathy

reveal

Whom are we serving? How would they like to be served? Who are we? All these questions of assessment and reflection are necessary in the pursuit of serving the public in meaningful ways that transcend the context of a class assignment. Instead of simply an assignment, our project is a real world endeavor, (with the class as the medium) where the “grades” are in the form of impact on the lives of people in the community.

I am working on Evaluating Rest Stops and Micro-Villages in the City of Eugene
 as a part of one project for this year’s Community Planning Workshop. The specific project is related to developing and identifying strategies toward best practice of providing housing for the unhoused population in Eugene. Our project will provide recommendations as to how the City of Eugene may better facilitate the provision of micro-village programs (like Opportunity Village) that provide safe places of transitional housing for the unhoused.

Recently, in an evaluative checkpoint of the work our group has done thus far, we met with our working committee. The working committee includes two representatives from City of Eugene’s Office of Human Rights Involvement, an Opportunity Village Volunteer, and a representative from both Community Supported Shelters and Nightingale Health Sanctuary.

This meeting was affirmation that, since the beginning of the project, our team has become more informed and well-versed in the issue of there being many unhoused individuals in the City of Eugene; however, it was also a reminder that our understanding has only scratched the surface. The majority of the meeting was set aside for dialoguing with our committee and receiving feedback about our work-to-date as well as our plan for moving forward.

Coincidentally, this meeting followed a class session about the integration of empathy into the planning process. This class in particular was generally relevant to our group and topic of engagement because assessing provisions for the unhoused, as a project in social justice, requires a point of departure firmly situated in empathy. The in-depth feedback received from our working committee, reiterated this necessity. How, as a team, do we integrate empathy into our approach to problem solving and planning? The way to integrate empathy is to start with empathy and the accompanied processes of active listening and welcoming constructive feedback.

It is not until we become listeners, unequivocally so, that we can become empathizers. Then, we can move in that empathy toward making a positive contribution and meaningful impact with/for the people we serve.

 

Jaleel Reed Evaluating Rest Stops and Micro-Villages EugeneAbout the Author: Jaleel Reed is a dual-Master’s student in Environmental Studies as well as Community and Regional Planning. An environmental scientist by degree from Northwestern University, he has re-oriented his interest toward environmental justice and community development. Outside of class, Jaleel doubles as a food and fitness enthusiast.

Voices of Eugene’s Homeless Community

Whoville Oregon Eugene Rest Stop and Micro Village Program Evaluation CPW Community Planning Workshop

My hope after graduate school is to work in a position where I have the power to listen to and empower communities whose voices have been silenced. Before coming to the University of Oregon, I spent time in Portland working with an Environmental Justice organization. After working in social justice at the grassroots level and facing opposition from agencies in power, I decided to get a Master of Community and Regional Planning.

Now, as a part of the Community Service Center’s Community Planning Workshop (CPW), I am working on a project that will give me the chance to share the voices of Eugene’s homeless community. My project involves evaluating Eugene’s current rest stop and microvillage program, and providing the city with ideas on how to better implement the program. When this project was proposed to us in the first week of class, I immediately knew it was my top choice; I believe that sleeping in a safe place is a vital human right and the large number of people who don’t have a safe, reliable place to sleep in our communities is a tragedy. After learning briefly about the state of homelessness in Eugene last term, I was excited to choose a CPW project I’m so passionate about!

The City of Eugene estimates that anywhere from 1500-3000 people in the community lack a safe and stable place to sleep at night, with many others at risk of becoming homeless. In April of 2014, the controversial and highly publicized removal of a homeless camp (called Whoville) from a vacant site near the University of Oregon campus led to increased community dialogue about how the City of Eugene is approaching local homelessness.

In 2013, City of Eugene started a Rest Stop Pilot Program  which allows people without permanent homes to camp legally in sites managed by community organizations.  Two of these rest stops are managed by Community Supported Shelters. At a third site provided by the city, a transitional micro-housing program called Opportunity Village allows 30-40 residents to live for longer periods of time. “Microvillages”, like Opportunity Village, offer residents their own housing in a safe, stable community where they can participate in employment training and often volunteer around the village in various ways.

The city would like to develop more long-term approaches to providing shelter through rest stops or microvillages. Through multiple conversations, the University of Oregon and the City of Eugene thought about how the University could contribute to issues within its own community. It was through these conversations the University asked the Community Service Center to evaluate the rest stop, and microvillage program. Specifically, our team is tasked with determining best practices from around the country, and providing recommendations on improving local housing services for the homeless.

The project will take around six months to complete. The first steps are to develop a better understanding of Eugene’s current programs, and study rest stop and microvillage programs in other places. After completing these initial steps, we will survey village residents, local service providers and other community members to evaluate the effectiveness of the current programs. At the end, we will provide the City of Eugene with a framework for the continued operation, and potential expansion, of microvillages in Eugene.

I am delighted to be working as part of such a motivated team, with members that hail from around the country and from different academic and professional backgrounds. Stay tuned as Brody Abbott, Henry Hearley, Nick Meltzer, Jaleel Reed, and I dig deeper into the topic of housing options and begin to study ground-breaking solutions from across the nation!

Emily Brown Eugene Rest Stop and Micro Village Program Evaluation CPW Community Planning WorkshopAbout the Author: Emily Brown is a first year Master of Community and Regional Planning student originally from Walla Walla, Washington. Before moving to Eugene, she lived in Portland where she was involved in Environmental Justice activism and worked for a renewable energy company.