Medical Lake mayor doesn’t want homeless shelter in city’s backyard

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MEDICAL LAKE, Wash. – Medical Lake Mayor Terri Cooper announced her opposition Saturday to an idea for a homeless shelter at the former Pine Lodge Corrections Center.

Cooper will deliver remarks in opposition to Medical Lake’s sheltering homeless people from Spokane at Medical Lake City Hall Sunday. She will be joined by several other Republican lawmakers including and

“During the news conference Mayor Cooper and Commissioner French will explain their opposition to the city’s plan and the negative impacts such a move would have on the community of Medical Lake,” Cooper’s office told media outlets Saturday.

At an Aug. 1 Spokane Homeless Coalition meeting, Spokane City Council Member Jonathan Bingle explained an idea for Spokane’s municipal government to acquire the Pine Lodge facility, , to expand housing offerings for people experiencing homelessness.

On Saturday, Bingle said that while the idea of acquiring the former prison in Medical Lake had been explored by his office as part of his work addressing housing issues in Spokane, it is not a concrete proposal.

“I have looked at a number of facilities including Pine Lodge. Pine Lodge looked to be a potentially good fit. As a part of our due diligence, we asked the state about availability. There are a lot of issues that would need to be addressed before we ever seriously planned on siting a facility there,” Bingle said.

Homelessness in Spokane is currently in the midst of a complicated tangle of policy discussions. The number of unhoused people while Spokane is currently in the midst of a legal battle as to whether a allows police to enforce an

According to a June 2022 YouGov digital poll of 1,000 people, 85% of Americans support addressing homelessness nationally, but they are 21% less likely to approve of funding for housing if it impacts their local community.

Bingle emphasized that the Pine Lodge idea is one of many, and that Medical Lake community members would be consulted if it were to evolve into an actual proposal before city council.

“I would not vote for any plan unless the community in which it was being sited was in favor,” Bingle said.


 

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