File #: 18-1215    Version: 1
Type: ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 12/12/2018 In control: City Council
Agenda date: 12/18/2018 Final action: 12/18/2018
Title: Approval of an Ordinance Declaring a Continuing State of Public Health Emergency Relating to Homelessness - First and Final Reading
Attachments: 1. Ordinance
Title
Approval of an Ordinance Declaring a Continuing State of Public Health Emergency Relating to Homelessness - First and Final Reading

Recommended Action
Committee Recommendation:
Not referred to a committee

City Manager Recommendation:
Move to approve the ordinance declaring a continuing state of public health emergency relating to human health and environmental conditions caused by increasing homelessness in our community on first and final reading.

Report
Issue:
Whether to approve an ordinance declaring a continuing state of public health emergency relating to increasing homelessness in our community.

Staff Contact:
Mark Barber, City Attorney, 360.753.8338

Presenter(s):
None - Consent Calendar Item.

Background and Analysis:
Homelessness is an issue of urgent public concern facing Olympia and the region. On June 14, 2018, the Thurston County Board of Health declared homelessness a public health crisis in Thurston County.

The latest Point-in-Time homeless census found at least 320 people sleeping unsheltered in unmanaged conditions countywide. In addition to this annual count, City staff periodically conducts an early morning count of people sleeping on the street in downtown; routinely finding approximately 130 people living unsheltered within the core of downtown.

On July 17, 2018, the City Council passed and adopted an ordinance declaring a public health emergency. Since that date, less than six months ago, the number of tents for homeless persons in downtown Olympia has increased by more than three hundred percent (300%). Since first declaring a public health emergency, the City of Olympia has been in the process of identifying and implementing solutions-based actions to address this increasingly challenging issue.

Declaring a state of continuing public health emergency provides a factual basis for the City's present and existing public health emergency, and references statutory authority that allows the City more flexibility to act quickly ...

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