A homeless woman on the streets of Portland bragged about the perks of living on the streets, including the free meals and ability to be high all day.
Wendy, a homeless woman, dove into the homeless crisis in the city in a new way by explaining how the nearly open-air drug policies are bringing more tents onto the streets.
Portland currently has more than 700 homeless encampments across the city within less than 150 square miles, and the ordeal has also led to the skyrocketing use of cocaine, heroine, LCD and meth which officials decriminalized in 2020.
'It’s a piece of cake really that's why you probably have so many out here really because they feed you three meals a day and don’t have to do sh*** but stay in your tent and party,' Wendy told Kevin Dahlgren with community engagement organization We Heart Seattle.
To which Dahlgren responded: 'I appreciate the honesty, doesn't feel like that's really helping anybody.'
'It's not, that's why you see all the tents - people are up all night and sleep all day,' Wendy said.
Wendy, a homeless woman, was candid about the benefits of living on the streets in Portland, Oregon. The city's nearly open air drug policy has led to more tents on the streets, she said
Wendy is a hair dresser who has been living on the streets for months. She is formally from Florida and became homeless when she divorced her husband.
She said someone had stole her dentures about six months ago and hasn't been able to return to work.
'They do that here,' Wendy said. 'I can't get new ones because I just go the first one paid for, so I don't know what I'm going to do.
'I can't go to work without teeth.'
Days later, Dahlgren returned to Wendy's tent and told her that her story inspired others to set up a fundraiser to buy her new dentures.
'I used to be just like everyone else, I used to have a really good job... I had a salon in Washington State, I drove a Lexus, and a house - and I loved to do hair,' she said.
The video saga of Wendy posted by Dahlgren on Twitter led to her brother and ex-husband finding her. They are now in the works of reconnecting.
'You found my sister,' John Mitchell wrote in a Tweet to Dahgren. 'Thanks Kevin for posting this. We knew she was homeless and likely in Portland but that’s about all. Thank you for being nice to her.'
There are several homeless organizations in Portland that serve the homeless and provide them with meals.
“It’s a piece of cake…you get three meals a day and don’t have to do shit…wake up, eat get high, wake up eat get high” repeat. A homeless woman shared with me why it’s so easy to be homeless. She was brutally honest because she hates the enablement “They are loving us to death” pic.twitter.com/HxRUoSFFFu
— Kevin Dahlgren (@kevinvdahlgren) December 31, 2022The video saga of Wendy posted by Dahlgren on Twitter led to her brother and ex-husband finding her
Portland decriminalized small amounts of meth, cocaine and heroin in 2020
Some of the most charming, trendy and expensive neighborhoods of the Pacific Northwest city are now overrun with tent cities crowding residential sidewalks
Portland currently has more than 700 homeless encampments across the city
Residents in Democrat-led Portland said in November that the escalating crime and homelessness is affecting their way of life and safety.
Some of the most charming, trendy and expensive neighborhoods of the Pacific Northwest city are now overrun with tent cities crowding residential sidewalks and littered with trash - and the issue is scaring away both locals and tourists.
In 2019, the city recorded just over 2,000 homeless individuals.
Three years later, that number has risen by 50 per cent, now at more than 3,000 living on the streets.
The rise in homelessness has also led to increase crime in the city.
Portland set a record for murders in 2021. It reported 90 homicides - shattering the previous high of 66.