by Dawn Paley, The Dominion – http://www.dominionpaper.ca
NICKELSVILLE (RENTON), SEATTLE–”Thank God for Nickelsville.” That’s how
two women living at the site summed up their feelings towards the
“permanent homeless shantytown” currently set up in the side lot of the
Bryn Mawr United Methodist Church in northeast Seattle, WA, USA.
Its existence has provided a safe place to people who would otherwise
have nowhere to live, allowing residents to “provide for themselves a
basic level of safety and sanitation when their government steadfastly
refuses to do so for them,” according to the Nickelsville website.
Nickelsville got its start on city property on September 22, 2008, in
response to a lack of city action in response to growing of
homelessness. Days later, the site was raided by police
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and 22 people were arrested. Nickelsville has moved five times since it
was founded.
Every so often, residents of Nickelsville, who call themselves
Nickelodeons, have to pack up and move. The City of Seattle sets time
limits for how long Nickelodeons are allowed to stay in one place.
Nickelsville has been located in Renton since March 5, and residents
will be forced to move on June 5.
Residents of Nickelsville are working to secure a permanent site where
long-term housing for 1,000 people can be built.
The entryway to Nickelsville.
“[Seattle] Mayor Nickels’ edict to systematically drive people out of
their encampments and to destroy their property was the trigger for the
present crisis,” reads the Nickelsville website
. “It is only befitting that our
shantytown be named in honor of Mayor Nickels and his ‘humane’ treatment
of the homeless.”
An estimated 75 people live in
Nickelsville, and new residents join on a steady basis. The women I
spoke to mentioned there were no children in the community, but said
that a family-oriented camp would be a good idea.
The donations board at the
entrance to Nickelsville. The primary demand of the people living there
is a permanent site to build long-term housing for 1,000 people.
Pallets are used as foundations
under the tents. Nickelodeons have organized themselves autonomously
with no outside funding from the city. No drugs or alcohol are permitted
in Nickelsville, and residents have formed a rotating security detail
that everybody participates in. On-site portable toilets and a dumpster
are available.
The cooking area. Food
donations are stored and managed communally. Residents keep additional
rations of canned goods in their tents.
Bruce Beavers has been living
in Nickelsville since September 25, 2008. Originally from Austin, TX, he
was employed for 10 years as a manager. Beavers was laid off, and found
other work, but couldn’t make ends meet. He lost his home in 2008. “We
don’t want money from the city,” he said. “We want permanent land.”
Beavers wears an armband in
support of the community. Locals and Seattle residents arrive at the
site in a steady stream to drop off donations and offer words of solidarity.
Nickelsville has been set up in
the side yard of the United Methodist Church in Renton, Seattle, since
March 5, 2009. It will remain there until June 5, when residents will
pack up and move to an as-yet-undisclosed site.
Filed under: Homelessness, Nickelsville, Seattle, international, tent city