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  • David Heitz

    City of Denver may buy broken-down RVs from homeless

    7 days ago

    The City and County of Denver is considering buying broken-down RVs from people experiencing homelessness or allowing them to be exchanged for down payment on housing.

    Denver homeless czar Cole Chandler said last week that the city would make money available in the 2025 budget to assist people living in their RVs. Chandler said $250,000 has been set aside, which council member Shontel Lewis commented is “not much.” The council and city staff discussed the issue during the budget hearing Wednesday for the Department of Housing and Stability.

    In the past, assistance to people living in RVs has come in the form of so-called safe parking spaces. These are parking lots where RVs can stay while case managers help them secure stable housing. But Lewis said it is difficult finding land for such places.

    Complaints about RVs on the rise

    Chandler said the city has been receiving less complaints about tent encampments and more complaints about RVs. He said the city tried to increase assistance to people with RVs last year but did not get any responses to a bid for standing up a safe parking space.

    Chandler explained that members of his staff will be meeting with members of the RV community soon. He said the city wants to create assistance that is useful to people living in RVs.

    The City Council stressed in its budget letter to the mayor that money be made available to assist people living in RVs. “Some form of compensation for that asset as they move indoors” might be possible, Chandler said. He said the city attorney’s office is looking into whether it could be stipulated that it be used for a down payment or deposit on an apartment.

    Plan to add “safe parking” falls through

    The City Council approved a contract in April with the Colorado Safe Parking Initiative to operate two lots for $350,000. The city had tried to double the number of lots. That would have served more than 30 vehicles, including some RVs.

    When city staff announced last June that they intended to expand the lots from two to four, the initiative told the council they received more than 1,700 calls for help between October 2017 and May 2022. The existing lots are in council districts four and ten.

    At least one of the new lots would have accommodated people with recreational vehicles. Council members said last year calls about RVs parking illegally in the city have multiplied. The planned added lots, which barely would have made a dent in the problem, were proposed by the council after it strengthened the city's clunker ordinance.




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    Patricia Tardugno
    5h ago
    They bought the RVs as the major element of their preparedness plan since our media keeps telling us our future is complete social collapse!! RVs enables them to bug out with everything they stock pile in it for survival, foods, equipment, supplies & clothes.Why would they want to trade that to the county for an over priced apartment where they are sitting ducks for petty criminals. Give them gas money to leave the state to go south for the winter.
    Daisy
    23h ago
    How would they get electricity, potable water, and the sewer tank pumped out? There's more to living in a RV than people who don't have them realize. Will the RV'S be motorhomes or travel trailer campers. They aren't saying anything about it in the article. Maybe it would be better to get the homeless tents instead.
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