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Blanchet House is a non-profit social services organization located in Portland, Oregon. The organization was founded in 1952, and it provides meals, transitional shelter, drug and alcohol recovery programs, and support services to those struggling with homelessness and addiction. [1]
YWCA of Greater Portland is a charitable organization with a mission to eliminate racism, empower women, and promote peace, justice, freedom, and dignity for all. The organization serves Multnomah County in four major areas of programming including youth services, domestic violence services, senior services, and social change.
Florence House is based on the Housing First model, a strategy to help move women from homelessness to a permanent supportive home environment. Florence House can house 50 or more former homeless women. The building includes 25 efficiency apartments, a safe-haven area with 15 semi-private spaces and 10 to 25 emergency shelter beds [2]
May 17—The City Council on Monday is being asked to enact an emergency moratorium on new shelters in the Portland's Bayside neighborhood, which has long been home to a cluster of social services ...
Nov. 29—The opening on Portland's new shelter for asylum seekers in Riverside has been delayed by one day. City spokesperson, Jessica Grondin said that occupancy paperwork for the space was ...
Bradley Angle is a nonprofit organization based in Portland, Oregon, United States. It was founded in 1975 as the first domestic violence shelter on the West Coast under the name Bradley Angle House. Bonnie Tinker was its cofounder and first director. The name honors Sharon Bradley and Pam Angle who died from the violence of the street life. [1 ...
2. The shelter is a house with a shower. Refuge of Hope partnered with Lighthouse Ministries to secure a home in southeast Canton that is roughly a mile from Refuge of Hope’s downtown campus.
In addition, the Portland Business Alliance sent a letter to city officials asking for removal or relocation of Right 2 Dream Too around December 2012. [4] In 2013, the encampment and Portland city officials developed tentative plans to move the homeless camp to a city-owned parking lot under the Broadway Bridge in Portland's Pearl District.