Hygiene4All
Hygiene4All offers showers, clothing, hygiene & medical supplies, and a space for loving community.
05/22/2026
05/22/2026
Thank you to Mitch Green for sponsoring an amendment that saves the tax payers $$, reduces 911 calls, and enhances the safety, health, and wellbeing of all communities across the housing divide.
And thank you to Councilors Avalos, Dunphy, Kanal, Koyama Lane, Morillo, & Pirtle Guiney for voting for collaboration over division - paid work / place to p*e, wash, & throw out trash over displacement and dispossession.
We can do this. Right now the City does not ensure those who've lost their housing with trash service, safe/clean toilets, and water to wash with. Right now one has to have a house or apartment to enjoy basic public infrastructure that supports keeping their places clean and healthy. Inequitable access to hygiene and sanitation infrastructure steepens the path to keeping or getting a job and enjoying the dignity, hope, and public acceptance needed for securing an apartment. While serial displacement from support networks of neighbors and organizations and having your belongings confiscated - prolongs and deepens trauma and time spent on the streets. Access to hygiene and sanitation keeps messes from happening, provides income and the joy of helping others - and it costs less that cleaning messes after they happen.
In 2024 the cost of cleaning up one p**p was 310 dollars a pop! No one wants to p**p in the street, no one wants to step in it, and no one enjoys cleaning it up. We can do better for and by our neighbors ! All of them!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Koethv0AqM
PORTLAND, Ore. – May 21, 2026 – Portland City Councilor Mitch Green's Sanitation, Hygiene and Workforce Development amendment (Robert Green 3) passed with a 7 – 5 vote at City Council Wednesday night.
The Sanitation, Hygiene, and Workforce Development amendment redirects $1 million from the City's $14.9 million homelessness sweeps budget into public bathrooms, free laundry services, litter collection and tent side waste collection services, and low-barrier job opportunities that meet people where they are. The amendment includes details that require cuts only be made to funding for camp clearances and exempts cuts to programs this amendment is designed to fund.
"I'm not proposing the defunding of the sweeps program," Councilor Green shared at last night's council meeting. "[But] I can't, in good moral conscience, vote for another budget that maintains this level [of funding for sweeps] without trying to reduce the level of harm by some small measure, and invest it in things that provide dignity."
Green made the case for his amendment on Wednesday by presenting quantitative data and referenced stories from his constituents whose lives are upended by regular contact with the City's sweeps apparatus. This isn't the first time Green has discussed the problem with sweeps and offered solutions to his Council p*ers.
"Constantly displacing and dispossessing traumatized people doesn't solve homelessness, it prolongs it," shared Councilor Green. "Instead of layering trauma on top of trauma, we can redirect these dollars to help people wash their clothes, use a bathroom with dignity, and take the first steps into work. We can address basic sanitation, and we can do it in a way that respects our shared humanity."
Councilor Green spent the last year in consultation with service providers, experts, and constituents who have long advocated for increased investments found in the amendment, as they have been shown to ensure the health and dignity of people experiencing homelessness, alleviate environmental impacts, and benefit local businesses.
https://youtu.be/1Koethv0AqM?si=BMhAFYCJX3Wt6lTw
Where do you go when people say no? Equal access to toilets is about dignity & basic human rights Why Hygiene4All: People are denied access to cafe and restaurant ba...
05/21/2026
We are full of gratitude to hear that an amendment passed through city council that trades displacement with belonging, purpose, and opportunity.
The Sanitation, Hygiene, and Workforce Development amendment (Green 3) redirects $1 million from the City’s homelessness sweeps budget into public bathrooms, free laundry services, litter collection and tent side waste collection services, and low-barrier job opportunities that meet people where they are. The amendment includes details that require cuts only be made to funding for camp clearances only and exempts cuts to programs this amendment is designed to fund.
“Constantly displacing and dispossessing traumatized people doesn’t solve homelessness, it prolongs it,” shared Councilor Green. “Instead of layering trauma on top of trauma, we can redirect these dollars to help people wash their clothes, use a bathroom with dignity, and take the first steps into work. We can address basic sanitation, and we can do it in a way that respects our shared humanity.”
Thank you and every councilor who supported opportunity for *all* people.
05/19/2026
05/19/2026
“You’ve had this job for well over a year. I just want to know, did you get the number down?” [Gillibrand] asked.
“Do we have 700,000 homeless or is it a million?”
Myrtle says :
Dear Friends,
You have an opportunity to encourage City leaders to adopt proactive, prosocial, cost-saving responses to Portland’s eviction, affordability, income, homelessness, environmental & budget crises.
The City’s responses & strategies of the last 5 years have increased costs while backpedaling on progress - ‘the center cannot hold.’
The amendments below - lower initial & longer term public costs & outlays, while enhancing collaboration on our shared problems - across the housing, income, & racial divides. They mend the social fabric & lower rising antipathy & dehumanization so many of our most vulnerable & underserved increasingly experience.
The following reduce city spending & shift spending on punitive/ extractive programming to investing in whole community, environmental and community health, safety, well-being:
Green 1: Reduces administrative bloat to restore frontline fire & rescue staffing & equipment that St. Johns residents, workers, & forests rely on for safety & emergency response;
Green 2. Addresses harms & abuses in Portland Solutions-managed shelters, give Council greater oversight of shelter goals, strategies, & spending, & invest $3 million in democratically run micro-villages with strong resident satisfaction & housing placement outcomes;
Green 3. Redirects $1 million from costly sweeps that repeatedly displace & strip unsheltered Portlanders of property & community. That 1 million would instead be set aside to pay for low-barrier workforce programs that pay people experiencing homelessness to help reduce street waste, increase recycling & reuse, & improve community health, safety, sanitation, & shared spaces for housed & unhoused neighbors alike.
Morillo- Novick 1. Reallocates 8 Million to protect 46 frontline workers - maintaining core services critical to community health, safety, & transparency - including: community services, Portland Street Response crisis responders, & parks, transportation, sewer, water, & technology workers
Avalos 1. Reverses Portland Clean Energy Funds going to PEMO (Homelessness Sweeps response which increases our carbon footprint & emissions rather than reducing them)
Koyama Lane 2. Sends 3.2 million in urban forestry from PCEF. Tree Canopy enhancement reduces the severe & disproportionate heating in our least funded neighborhoods where the majority of Black, Hispanic, & Indigenous; studies also show that trees encourage public use of public spaces, creating passive surveillance that studies consistently show reduces crimes of opportunity & violence more efficiently, dollar for dollar than adding police & social workers.
Smith 1. Reallocates General Funds for SummerWorks- employs & gives BIPOC teens work experience
Pirtle-Guiney 4. Restores funds for children/family programs lost to austerity
From 2020–2026, our Mayors’ have responded to KNOWN affordability, income disparity, & global heating challenges only after they’ve occurred - driving up costs & division. These amendments offer a different path: evidence-backed approaches that emphasize support, participation, & prevention - & health & dignity for all. By involving low income & neighbors experiencing homelessness in solving shared problems, Portland can reduce costs, improve outcomes, & build safer, healthier communities that everyone enjoys.
You can share your support investments that value, protect & invite our Beloved Communities to collaboratively solve shared problems- by writing council & having them prioritize these pro-community investments.
In appreciation, solidarity, & HOPE (may it spring eternal),
Sandra
Copy & paste & send to restore hope and collaboration to our city budget [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
Myrtle listens to public testimony and helps me send out info about the budget amendments that move exorbitant city spending from punishment , division, and cleaning up the mess after the fact and invests instead in collaboration, and paths to healthy robust and safe communities - that costs LESS !!! see info in comments below
love sandra
05/16/2026
cut the bloat - save our core services
Portland councilors look to slash upper management jobs to fund public safety Slimming the city’s administrative positions is an issue city labor leaders have raised the alarm on since Portland first underwent its major government overhaul last year, which resulted in a new administrative structure – and many new administrative positions.
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