Anchorage

Opposition fills another evening of testimony on Anchorage plan to buy buildings for homeless services

Public testimony Tuesday before the Anchorage Assembly on a plan to purchase buildings for homeless and treatment services is headed for a fifth night.

The continued public hearing, which started July 14, again did not finish by midnight. It was scheduled to continue at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

More than 140 people have testified on the city’s increasingly controversial plan to transform its approach to homelessness and addiction. The plan is being proposed by Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz and his administration, as well as several members of the Assembly.

[Public testimony on proposed city purchase of buildings for homeless services will extend into next week]

The plan is to move away from a shelter-heavy model into a “housing-first” model with the goal of transitioning people out of homelessness over the course of a couple years. To do that, the city wants to purchase several buildings to provide more services.

The buildings are the Best Western Golden Lion Hotel on 36th Avenue just east of the Seward Highway; Americas Best Value Inn & Suites on Spenard Road; the former Alaska Club building at Tudor Road and Gambell Street; and the downtown building housing the Bean’s Cafe soup kitchen at Third Avenue and Karluk Street.

The Golden Lion building would be a substance-misuse treatment facility, the Americas Best building would be a transitional housing facility, the Alaska Club building would provide day and overnight shelter, and Bean’s Cafe would be run as a day shelter.

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Residents who live or own property near the proposed buildings have been especially vocal in opposition, though people from throughout the city have commented. As on previous nights, the majority of testifiers Tuesday opposed the plan.

In addition to fears of increased crime and lower property values, residents have repeatedly called out the city and Assembly for what they believe is lack of a public process and transparency around the purchase of the buildings.

Bill Evans, a former assemblyman and 2021 Anchorage mayoral candidate, testified that everyone in the city is afflicted by the homelessness problem. But he opposed Berkowitz’s plan. Like many others, Evans criticized the process and the amount of community engagement prior to the plan reaching the Assembly.

“With issues that are this impactful, and cause such fear in the community -- whether you think they’re justified or not, they do cause that fear -- you have to do a lot more groundwork,” he said.

Several other testifiers said that they don’t think the homeless would utilize more housing if the city invested in it. They enjoy their lives on the street, having more freedom, several said.

Sean Sullivan, a homeless outreach specialist for RurAL CAP, said that’s not so. Sullivan’s job is to engage with the homeless and connect them to services like housing.

“We are at gridlock because we don’t have anywhere to house them,” he said.

If testimony finishes Wednesday, the Assembly will likely hold a vote on when to take up deliberation and a vote on the proposed ordinance. Assembly Chair Felix Rivera has said he wants time to digest all the testimony, and he plans to propose taking the issue up Monday.

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Aubrey Wieber

Aubrey Wieber covers Anchorage city government, politics and general assignments for the Daily News. He previously covered the Oregon Legislature for the Salem Reporter, was a reporter for the Salt Lake Tribune and Bend Bulletin, and was a reporter and editor at the Post Register in Idaho Falls. Contact him at awieber@adn.com.

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