Good observation. He was walking down the sidewalk of boarded up buildings to illustrate the homeless being gone.
@OrganNLou7 ай бұрын
That will return in time, once the tourists start coming back in.
@LCx8297 ай бұрын
Now that I know it’s not tent city I want to visit again.
@diodelvino30487 ай бұрын
they'll be back, it wont happen overnight
@prestonphelps16497 ай бұрын
True
@theamer17767 ай бұрын
I live in NE Portland and all they have done is pushed the homeless out into the suburbs. The problem has not gone away.
@hyperslow556gungamer6 ай бұрын
It has for "those people".
@barefootjakejake77656 ай бұрын
Define "the problem."
@Scorch10286 ай бұрын
It’s a relief that they’re out of your neighborhood.
@Raylene-wv4vf6 ай бұрын
Making it difficult, less easier than before, some folks might do something to not be homeless. Go to work programs that give clothing vouchers, job training, and the like.
@barefootjakejake77656 ай бұрын
@Raylene-wv4vf you think that's a valid solution? That's been the approach for 20 years, and all it's done is make the situation much worse. Folks are homeless for various reasons, many of which preclude them from stable employment. You obviously don't want to be "them" because of how hard it already is, and you want to make it harder? Disgusting🤢🤢🤮
@Jackrbbt19897 ай бұрын
The one thing I noticed in your video and noticed being down there in person last Fall for a concert, a lot of the mom and pop businesses are permanently shuttered already. The damage is done to the working class. It really saddened me because I grew up watching, from just across the WA border, how hard everyone in Portland worked back in the eighties to clean up and revitalize the downtown. Everyone from the politicians to individuals within the community chipped in. They made a lot of sacrifices and paid a lot of excess money in tax to build infrastructure and pay for extra police. They made it happen, but then in one year the current government in that area undid all their hard work. Even if they do get it cleaned up again, all the old blocks formerly populated by family-owned businesses will get bought up by developers. It will never be the same. There will be no place for working-class families, much like Seattle. Maybe that's what the politicians wanted all along.
@jlh99107 ай бұрын
YUP and government policies let it get torn down in a few short years instead of policing them and arresting the rioters etc.. they just destroyed hard working tax paying entrepreneurs left and right. And allowing homeless free rein. this should have been cleaned up in a few months instead of taking years and all this funding totally wasted tax payer money with nothing getting fixed.. but then when your the head of some homeless out reach making 200k a year your probably not all the motivated to kill your own job by solving this issue permanently.
@ccampbell72147 ай бұрын
Corporate buy off, "you will own nothing and be happy ", Klaus Shwab . The Socialist communist takeover is upon us..Question is , will we just keep acquiescencing ? Or will we take this country back? Living free , or living under the boot of communism.. We have a choice... I have great hope in this country, that we will unite, and collectively brainstorm and right this sinking ship .. it's now or never.. We've got to make the hard choices, and do what is necessary to stop these malevolent nefarious oligarchs... At all costs, or what do we have? More of this ? No thanks.
@capricedowsland30687 ай бұрын
Yep those people that were run out I doubt would ever come back. The damage is done. And it is sad.
@jackyflowers34937 ай бұрын
Sad, but most likely, true. Look at what happened to Maui..😞
@SartorialisticSavage657 ай бұрын
There's still lots to see and do here but ok
@mpurtzer4487 ай бұрын
Multnomah County government purchased more than 22,000 tents and more than 69,000 tarps for the homeless over the past two years. for 6,500 homeless
@deborahharvey8546 ай бұрын
Where did the tents go?
@belight1236 ай бұрын
@@deborahharvey854 back to Wall Street
@donk91896 ай бұрын
Some just wanted to be multi tent owners
@JohnCresswell-qh2nm6 ай бұрын
Purchasing tents for the homeless bit putting illegals in hotels somethings wrong with that picture
@msmoe86876 ай бұрын
Then they sweep the camps so they can replace all of the stuff they just gave them, continuing the cycle.
@nancysaso43807 ай бұрын
All the same homeless people are still out there Being homeless, they just move to other areas of town,lmao
@Bluespicygreen7 ай бұрын
No, you are wrong Portland is the first state to officially end homelessness
@noyopacific7 ай бұрын
You seem to be easily amused @nancysasso4380. Please tell me what it is about homelessness makes you laugh your “butt” off ? I can understand being unsympathetic and not caring about others. The humor in this escapes me however.
@AUniqueHandleName4446 ай бұрын
Better somewhere other than the busiest and most heavily foot-trafficked parts of town.
@mrmark86036 ай бұрын
They should use the free drug rehabs that we waste million$ on annually, and get a job!
@Posmlady6 ай бұрын
Yeah, not! A bunch have moved to my street and the kids are afraid to play outside and we're finding drug stuff all over! @@AUniqueHandleName444
@NeoNeo7077 ай бұрын
They cleaned up the down town, but homeless everywhere in East side. It was scary when I visited the area last month. Why you think homeless disappeared just because Portland outlawed. They just moved to outskirts.
@JasonMartin9157 ай бұрын
I was homeless for a couple of months in Evansville Indiana. I'm not anymore, I'm working and have my own place again. I don't know about Portland, but here, mental illness is a huge problem among the homeless
@jessicaanderson78857 ай бұрын
It's hard to be mentally healthy when you are homeless.
@JasonMartin9157 ай бұрын
@@jessicaanderson7885 yes it is, but a lot of the people I was homeless with had severe mental problems before they were homeless
@kitsuneneko25677 ай бұрын
It seems to me that people who aren't mentally ill are much better equipped to be able to find and keep a home. I dont think that's coincidence.
@JasonMartin9157 ай бұрын
@@kitsuneneko2567 it's no coincidence
@scottanderson34067 ай бұрын
It's a huge problem with the people they elect too !
@sjoneil7 ай бұрын
Go .5 miles out in any direction, you'll find the tent cities. They've moved into residential neighborhoods.
@barefootjakejake77656 ай бұрын
Maybe that's appropriate. Lol, residential neighborhoods are for residing, perhaps even residing outside 😂
@fffmcfff91125 ай бұрын
And? Point is to get the out of the city. They gotta go somewhere.
@FFTS7 ай бұрын
The drug decriminalization drew some homeless too. I'm a Libertarian, so I don't think drugs should be illegal, but you can't have that Libertarian stance while not prosecuting actual crimes like shoplifting, assault, defacating in public...etc. Anything that infringes on other's rights and freedoms needs to still be illegal.
@hiphoppingalong7 ай бұрын
Not providing mental health care and affordable housing are major contributors. Without family support many working people would be on the streets because of housing.
@sejannus8777 ай бұрын
Libertarians don’t believe you don’t persecute crime, more that less regulation that would make such acts crimes. Once they’re law, what’s done is done.
@bobnas7 ай бұрын
I used to be libertarian, but I saw how drugs absolutely destroy communities, even those with government enforcing laws against actual crimes. It just doesn’t work. Look at the data and how rampant drug abuse and societal decay correlate perfectly. It’s just wishful thinking. I once saw a comment that got under my skin that read, “Libertarians are just conservatives who haven’t grown up yet!” That stuck with me, but looking back now, my goodness how true that was 😂
@polarbear46127 ай бұрын
Libertarians don’t believe in rules and regulations other than the rules and regulations that they believe in. 😵💫😂😂
@joncarbone7 ай бұрын
@@bobnas Correct. Because people on drugs don't care. They'll sleep in a puddle of piss with a smile on their face.
@stewartgorley25236 ай бұрын
He's not lying. I'm a truck driver regional and me and my wife walked through a Chinatown. When it was at its worst, we weren't worried but you could definitely smell it and see it. The homeless were nice to people pass and through, but their presence will still very well-known.
@geoffdbirds7 ай бұрын
Portland is getting rid of the homeless but they're sending them out to the rural communities now because where I live in Newberg Oregon we're seeing more more of them
@josearmando7267 ай бұрын
Some states like Montana and Wyoming are also suddenly getting homeless people.
@LuckyBaldwin7777 ай бұрын
That's OK. Rural areas also have hog farms. Problem solved.
@juleswins37 ай бұрын
@@LuckyBaldwin777Hog farms don’t stink nearly as bad or create nearly the mess as the “homeless” aka bums, do.
@mikeyo1O17 ай бұрын
@@juleswins3 I recommend the movie Snatch. Should clear things up.
@juliehanson11757 ай бұрын
@@LuckyBaldwin777 Yeah, there's an old episode of Deadwood that clears that up.
@justincase22917 ай бұрын
I have to admit Portland has done a good job cleaning up the "targeted areas". The problem is they're moving to every empty space they can find. They're not removing them they are shuffling them. The city shouldn't have let this happen in the first place. I appreciate your enthusiasm for Portland, but the politics need to change to make things great again. No more free stuff.
@redeyedmongoose29637 ай бұрын
You are so very right modern-day Portland is a very sad city. It is much politics as it is the homeless.
@Bluestar-19697 ай бұрын
Like the police department, fire department, public schools, ect? Or you mean just nothing for homeless people?
@justincase22917 ай бұрын
@@Bluestar-1969 Not sure what you are saying.
@fuzzytigercat7 ай бұрын
@@justincase2291 They're saying you're an idiot because all those services they mentioned are free. So you're just trying to screw over the homeless or everyone? Have more compassion for people struggling. You might be one of them someday. How would you like to be treated?
@robertensign87867 ай бұрын
@@fuzzytigercatthey aren’t free. They use our hard earned tax dollars.
@tg360andbeyond7 ай бұрын
People are being priced out of Portland and most other places by corporate fees. Wages have stagnated, rents continue to rise, "corporate investors" keep buying up more of the real estate. None of this is sustainable but the wealthiest among us don't care as long as they have another Tesla. There is literally no consideration for your fellow human. Hey, but if it looks good, it must be fixed right?
@Aspire-237 ай бұрын
Two bedroom apartment in decent area 3k or less?
@DiogenesOfCa7 ай бұрын
Runaway capitalism is evil
@MYRRHfamily7 ай бұрын
What can the wealthy among us actually do about it? Serious question. This guy walked through my neighborhood and I see their suffering.
@MsMorri7 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in that area in a low income housing and didn't exactly like walking past someone's smelly tent or latrine, this feels like a bit of a ignorant statement. I don't feel like this is full proof solution, but it at least did something. I'm not waking up every night to gun shots or my home being blocked off by yellow tape and surrounded by cops. When I can, I try to help the homeless by getting them food, water, and finding a place to stay. What are you doing to actually help find a better solution?
@petermeyer42067 ай бұрын
@@MYRRHfamily Pay taxes?
@craigdeming83917 ай бұрын
Don't mean jack if the businesses have all left or gone broke. It's curtains baby, ain't no curtain call!
@jlh99107 ай бұрын
@lostinthedesert-hp4bw YUP Briggs totally missed that part of his presntation and selective videoing.. just go by any of the freeways they are still there..
@jonyjoe84647 ай бұрын
lower the rents in downtown so business can come back.
@jlh99107 ай бұрын
@@jonyjoe8464 its not rental rates its crime and homeless and the public does not want to come downtown we used to go a few times a month downtown to eat etc.. have not been downtown to eat in about 4 years now other than to go the Mat club which is private.
@AUniqueHandleName4446 ай бұрын
@@jlh9910 Man, it's a real pity, too, because in 2010-2016 or so, Portland was an AMAZING city to live in. And everyone back then told me it had gone massively downhill already.
@MarkRVillano7 ай бұрын
I fail to understand why or how they plan on enforcing this new law when they've made it abundantly clear to the residents of Portland that the laws may be freely ignored without consequence.
@melissaa1527 ай бұрын
I’m curious as to why the politicians finally did anything about the problem. They allowed it to grow for years, largely ignoring the tax paying citizens, homeowners, and businesses, all while they virtue signaled that they “cared” about the homeless. Homeless were setting up tents in resident’s yards, and the owners were helpless to get the situation changed. They couldn’t get rid of the camps, nor could they sell their properties. So what happened? Did the homeless finally encroach on the politicians’ properties?
@joeuntalan29916 ай бұрын
Democrats have no plan. Propaganda film from the start!
@YowzaBowzaWowza6 ай бұрын
@@melissaa152: It’s an election year. Dems are getting nervous about staying in power.
@darrinshort35353 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great job of filming and narrating this video very detailed blocked by block explanation of the incremental improvements. I don’t think anyone does this better so nice to see Portland heading in this direction.
@dyske-7 ай бұрын
I traveled across the country last year, and Portland was my favorite city. People are so compassionate. I'm glad it's getting better. Thank you for making this video.
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching
@danros65307 ай бұрын
Oh bless your heart. I think you were in a different Portland.
@FlintIronstag237 ай бұрын
Too much compassion and tolerance is what got Portland in the homeless mess in the first place. Hopefully it is a lesson learned.
@dyske-7 ай бұрын
@@FlintIronstag23 I prefer to live in a community where people are compassionate and tolerant of people who are down on their luck. There are many good people in Portland who are doing what they can to help people in need such as building new shelters, etc. I don’t expect any community to eradicate homelessness, but it’s kinda nice to see so many people pitching in to help out even when some of the city policies didn’t work out… I didn’t see that in too many other cities in the US. KEEP PORTLAND WEIRD!
@dh23927 ай бұрын
Maybe Portland Oregon finally put 2 and 2 together, and figured out why their population has been declining. People don't want this crap in their neighborhoods.
@donk91896 ай бұрын
Portland is still beautiful there is still hope !!
@cronos1227704 ай бұрын
This is why Portland has been destroyed. People like you and your sense of altruism for people who don't care. I grew up in Portland in 80s and 90s. You've destroyed it.
@GG-kt2uk7 ай бұрын
I ❤️ Portland!!! So good to see this. I watched a video where outreach group was offering the homeless housing and rehab. Only 1 person agreed to get off the street. So it was time to make it illegal. Thank you for the video!
@bcascadascrane98312 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@claytonandrosa7 ай бұрын
Good for you, Portland!! Let's hope this spreads to other areas!! Good luck!!
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
I hope so too!
@Roger-vz7ol7 ай бұрын
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs The homeless problem is much larger than whether they are living in tents in Portland. All Portland has accomplished is pushing the homeless to other areas of the state and country. This entire country is in trouble. Painting it with a new coat of paint isn't going to fix what is wrong with this country. Don't believe me? take a gander at Salt Lake City.
@vickiedutton68297 ай бұрын
Shove kate brown and her council out of office.
@mrmark86036 ай бұрын
Eugene next...PLEASE!
@NightmareNeighborsInThe5417 ай бұрын
I miss my dear Portland. Late nights running around from club to club and just having fun. I know things change but it's just lost it's vibe.
@gordocarbo7 ай бұрын
Many parts of So Cal, same thing. SFV I grew up in...turned into a chithole yrs ago got sick of it and left. Overpriced gridlock traffic crazy high rents crime like theres no tomorrow.
@davidquiett7777 ай бұрын
That’s absolutely wonderful news! I hope the businesses start flowing back in and they feel comfortable
@FlintIronstag237 ай бұрын
If Portland wants business to come back, they need to make a concerted effort to go after shoplifters and those who break windows and damage property.
@davidquiett7777 ай бұрын
One can only hope. Maybe if they can address encampments, they can address the crime problem
@RandomRabbit0077 ай бұрын
I think this is the only logical end-result for most big cities (including those in California). Sure things got weird during the pandemic (and a couple years after) but eventually things will slowly but surely return to normal. ALOT of these dumbass progressive cities are rethinking their ideas and starting to return to reason and logic.
@gradysizemore56897 ай бұрын
not likely to happen anytime soon. What does it say when woke company Nike closes due to theft?
@LeviathantheMighty7 ай бұрын
You're viewing the ultra left as non evil, when in fact, they are.
@andrewswieton46817 ай бұрын
Briggs will always be the best channel!
@SqueakyWheelMakesNoise7 ай бұрын
This video makes me remember what portland used to look like before all the craziness. Looking hopeful
@soaring17 ай бұрын
Me too!
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
They are making progress. I hope it keeos going.
@danros65307 ай бұрын
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs Don't hold your breath.
@ramses88477 ай бұрын
Miss those times. Saturday market was fun on a nice day.
@SqueakyWheelMakesNoise7 ай бұрын
@@ramses8847 o ya Saturdays were the best. All these vendors with products they made. Some real talent out there. Sometimes I'd take the train into the downtown part to avoid the traffic and spend the whole day.
@joseph.cotter4 ай бұрын
A couple of quick things to consider. The mental health issue with homelessness is not just Portland, it is fundamental to homelessness anywhere in the United States. Back in the late 70's/early 80's there was this movement to shut down many of the mental health facilities across the country and replace them with "community centers" where the funding for the facilities would go theoretically to organizations who were "better suited" to handling the problem then an "uncaring government bureaucratic system." (Note, this of course was not all of the population, just about 80% that were considered not at immediate risk to themselves or others. People who were still effectively for the most part unable to function outside of a structured environment due to their disabilities.) This happened around the same time that there was a movement to integrate mentally and emotionally handicapped individuals back into the general school system rather than in specialized facilities. Now, the latter is a whole different topic so I won't touch on that since it has it's plusses and minuses with people who have vastly different opinions who are all correct, unlike the homeless situation. The people who basically were repopulated into the general population from the facilities were let go for the most part in a very haphazard way without any overarching plan for how this transition would be handled. As has often been the case in our (the United States version of) Democratic process (really a capitalist perspective, not really Democratic) it was considered the best way was to let the various governmental sub entities or regions decide the best way to handle the money for this and theoretically the best methods would surface from this social experiment. That's not what happened. Corruption, incompetence, and eventually, a redirection of funds into other areas like police forces eventually evolved into the homeless environment we have now. Next wrinkle... About two decades ago, there was a story on NPR about homelessness where they talked about a study where they were trying uncover some of the aspects of homelessness and they pointed out how homeless people didn't move in any significant numbers from one area to another, not even to another county. They pointed out that the belief was that the members of the homeless population had known support structures and a known environment that was more important than a promise of a possible better situation elsewhere. That the "unknown" was a bigger risk factor to them then the potential benefit of a better situation elsewhere. You may see where I'm going with this... That all changed. Why? People's view of the world changed drastically over the last 50 years, which eventually trickled down even to the homeless population. We reached a point where homeless were able to get a solid perspective that their lot would be much better off if they could hop a train, hitchhike or find some way to make their way to places like San Francisco, Portland and Seattle, and so they did. Effectively this resulted in a mass migration away from extreme conservative places where people believed "you pull yourself up by your bootstraps or die" to places where there was some level of empathy for the people in that situation, and thus the empathetic got swamped by people leaving the harsher areas and the people in harsher areas saw the rise in homelessness in other areas as evidence that their way was right since they had much less of a problem, never admitting that this was only due to their dumping their problem on others. There is the argument that places like San Francisco, Portland and Seattle brought much of this on themselves by going overboard in being accommodating. I won't take a position on that since there are valid arguments on all sides of that debate. However, I will point out that these are the areas that are to some extent at least, trying to find solutions to the underlying issues that cause homelessness in the United States. Also, homelessness in the United States is fundamentally different than most of the rest of the world and so any discussion of homelessness worldwide is not really germane to that of the United States.
@stevelee49747 ай бұрын
That’s good, finally a little bit of progress
@Jigsjigz7 ай бұрын
its almost time to vote i guess.
@RippleE.M.P5 ай бұрын
in case any are wondering. no it is not usually this sunny in portland
@mechmany2k7 ай бұрын
Too bad that they didn't bother doing this, before so many small businesses suffered, closed and left... Go figure...
@markostner7 ай бұрын
Hey Briggs, the tents are now up and down Sandy from Parkrose to 181st, especially around 148th and 158th. I pass a few on Airport Way on the way to work. But I am encouraged by your video and will check out Burnside from Powell's Books to the Max Gold Line.
@petezee66457 ай бұрын
What’s most obvious is how empty and quiet the streets of Portland are. That’s a beautiful day and it’s a ghost town
@ayeeeeeeee62407 ай бұрын
maybe it’s a workday?
@hannahsummer227 ай бұрын
That area can get busy on the weekends. Most of the foot traffic during the weekdays is going to be around Pioneer Square.
@Krobra917 ай бұрын
i currently live in happy valley, but when i lived closer to downtown is one of the things i LOVED! its quiet over the weekends, mostly you see tourists, locals walking their dogs or out walking and shopping. the weekdays when you see all the office workers come but its really nice!
@martingoldblunt51637 ай бұрын
Cause antifa are sleeping until the next riot
@petezee66457 ай бұрын
On ‘workdays’ prepandemic the city had a vibe. It was buzzin. Big lunchtime and happy hour crowds. Tourists on the streets every day. Now it’s noticeably quieter. Really quiet. NE 23rd area is definitely ‘back’. But I think this is the next big challenge for Portland after cleaning up the city. Generating the workforce and tourist critical mass to make it a vibrant city again 🤞
@GeeEm13137 ай бұрын
Briggs, there still are many tents hanging around. Check the Skidmore Fountain MAX stop. Also, the old bus station is now a shelter called "Do Good." In order to ride Greyhound, you go to a nearby storefront and get the bus underneath the Steel (or Broadway?) Bridge. As an outreach worker partnered with Trimet, we try to get people into shelters.
@AlexanderWaylon7 ай бұрын
Glad to see your city trying hard to stop it now, and wash it self back off. Portland, Maine also has this same problem. They’re now fencing areas under bridges and overpasses here.
@danros65307 ай бұрын
It won't last. This shit got started, not in spite of how people voted, but BECAUSE of who they put into office. Fuxk PDX!
@kelvincannon36757 ай бұрын
They setting laws that make it legal, for them to repossess the public sidewalks when, & ever they want, they can take their little funky sidewalk, & whatever other “carrot,” they’re “dangling” over freedom to get people move/do against their/our will… …they only wanna see people who aren’t obliged to be modern-slaves as “homeless,” in a perfect system, if you don’t live how everyone else wants you to live, you shouldn’t live on the streets… …but in “the broken system,” that makes your life impossible whenever, & if you don’t wanna do, what they say do, even if what they’re demanding you to do, isn’t in your best interest, it’s either be a modern-slave, or stand alone hence, living outside of the “normalizations,” that make “unnecessarily vulnerabilities” more beneficial to employers, than being “unnecessarily vulnerable” is to those, who succumb to being “unnecessarily vulnerable!” #ThePerksOfResidingindoorsShouldntComeWithTheCaviatOfNormalizedUnnecessaryVulnerabilitiesignoringUnnecessaryVulnernabilitiesBecomingThePreyOfUnnecessaryVulnerabilitirsAndOrNotBeingAbleToDefendSelfAgaisntTheNormalizationsOfUnnecessaryVulnerabilities #LiveFreeOrDieinAPrisonDisquisedAsALowToNoincomeGhettoProjectConcentrationCampUnderTheVeilOfAffordableHousing
@kinjunranger1407 ай бұрын
My city didn't allow it to happen. How hard is that for lefties to understand?
@Aspire-237 ай бұрын
I will be flying into Portland Maine soon heading up to Rockland. Wife loves Lobster. Blueberry pie for me.
@gordocarbo7 ай бұрын
Ca has been this way for yrs. From the border to Nor Cal its one giant homeless mess. Its not getting any better only worse
@kitsuneneko25677 ай бұрын
Im glad i left portland, and im glad theyre finally cleaning it up... A little.
@humchan2k7 ай бұрын
Born and raised in PDX.....what has happened to my home breaks my heart. I'm glad they're finally getting their shit together...the destruction of our beautiful elk statue was unbelievable. PDX needs to heal still.
@BreadLobby7 ай бұрын
Lol im also a portlander. Why tf are people still talking about the damn elk statue? If thats our biggest problem, then we are doing pretty damn good compared to most of the world
@petezee66457 ай бұрын
It’s not the biggest problem but it symbolizes the willful destruction of the city (I was down at the protests when that area got trashed. Something I was massively enthusiastic about and now deeply regret being part of in hindsight)
@aceclarksatx7 ай бұрын
Ever since those Californian invasion in the late 80s. Portland has been destroyed
@norahjaneeast54507 ай бұрын
I unfortunately think we're never coming back from this my hometown too
@thekp5037 ай бұрын
You keep voting the same losers in to office...
@jamesmecham42667 ай бұрын
It's not a "homelessness" situation, it's a drug addiction crime problem.
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
No, that is part of the problem. A majority of the people are suffering from addiction or mental illness but that isn’t everyone. One thing that covers this whole situation is the word homelessness.
@Aspire-237 ай бұрын
I have friends who choose to live in their car. Most by choice for a number of different reasons. Drugs for most of them isn't the reason. Some just got tired of working 60 plus hours a week on a mortgage and other bills. Stress was killing them. They still work but at their pace. Me/wife was thinking of selling our house and purchasing a rv to live in. But i would rather rent apartment. Can still be mobile after lease is up.
@mrmark86036 ай бұрын
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs Drug addiction and the accompanying crime has NOTHING to do with homelessness. Oregon wastes millions on unused drug treatment centers. They DO NOT WANT to get sober/clean!
@joeuntalan29916 ай бұрын
This is a democrat situation. Every state democrats control is in shambles and people always think things will change and they keep voting the same POS party in over and over. Oregon was a red state up to 1988 and life was good here. Ever since the democrats have taken over it has been a shit show! Case in point, look at the state of the entire country! Nuff said!
@meggrotte47606 ай бұрын
It should be forced to get clean but apparently they have rights in this case
@Yormsane7 ай бұрын
So if Portland's homeless population has dropped by ~1,000, and they aren't camping in the city's designated safe spaces or on the streets, where did they go? Did they freeze to death over winter? Did they hop on a freight train and head out of town?
@SusanHenry-kx2cm7 ай бұрын
They put them on buses and shipped them to other city's. Astoria Or. is one of the places they sent them... Little city's need funds so they use their mental health as a revenue sorce...
@xisigma7 ай бұрын
Astoria on the coast? So portland is paying astoria to take mental patients? @@SusanHenry-kx2cm
@RavenOregon7 ай бұрын
I live a few hours South. Every time the bigger cities do something about vagrant camping, they just head South on I5 and swarm smaller towns or wherever their "lifestyle" is enabled. Kicking the can down the road. Portland voting trends have ruined the rest of Oregon. I hope people learn the error of their ways...
@rufust.firefly19217 ай бұрын
@@SusanHenry-kx2cm Who's "they"? And do you have any evidence that "they" sent them anywhere? Sounds like another conspiracy theory.
@andreavaughn8547 ай бұрын
They're moving to the burbs! I'm seeing more in Vancouver.
@heartattackhiker35276 ай бұрын
Thanks Briggs for making me want to visit the place I was born. ❤️
@RodeoDogLover7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this on-the-ground coverage! Nice to see some balance retuning. ❤
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
You are so welcome!
@kevdiggidydowg7 ай бұрын
Great to hear! I had a brief stint in PDX from March 2021 - Oct 2022 and I must say that Portland kinda made me rethink my home. I had first visited in 2012 and that’s what made me fall in love with it. Hope it’s going back to that same old kind of place.
@bridgetletcher30347 ай бұрын
You seem to be just concentrating on downtown. I'm in SE near Foster/77th & work in SE near Raymond/26th. There are still quite a few homeless in both these areas. At work I have to navigate a filthy/cluttered sidewalk to get to my work place. If people refuse to go to a shelter because of the rules (no booze/drugs etc) just how is the no sleeping on sidewalks going to be enforced?
@danros65307 ай бұрын
Narrative, yo! You think anyone in YOUR neighborhood thinks shit is looking up? Not likely.
@bridgetletcher30347 ай бұрын
@@danros6530 ????
@Joy4theworld7 ай бұрын
I live further east and it’s gotten much worse in the past couple of years.
@horsecaller14467 ай бұрын
I've been to Portland three times in my life. Twice while I was in the Navy, my ship sailed up the Columbia for the rose festival. Once later with my family. I, we loved the place. I'm not conservative, I've voted both ways, but from what I can tell, the city government and the people have become so woke, you couldn't drag me back to that city!
@Basstaic7 ай бұрын
Portland can be a pretty cool little city. I'm glad you guys are starting to get it back. I only hope all of the great west coast cities (San Diego, San Franciso, Seattle ...) can regain a little of their former glory as well.
@gordocarbo7 ай бұрын
Nice thought but its hopeless out here.
@rthepunk7 ай бұрын
I attended a convention in Portland 15 years ago. Worst city I went to as far as safety. We had stoned kids coming into the hotel area and stealing food. Some of us tried to take a walk in the downtown area and visit shops but we were constantly bothered by stoned kids wanting money. We just decided to stay in our hotel rooms. Seems that Portland government created and nurtured the problem.
@suetrublu7 ай бұрын
How dya figure? You actually think the city government is responsible for addiction, mental illness and skyrocketing housing costs? I do agree that some of PDX government's decisions exacerbated these problems for a time. But this has occurred in cities all over the US. Portland may have got hit hard sooner, but its figuring out solutions that apparently are working sooner.
@rachelinman46387 ай бұрын
You were scared of stoned kids?
@rthepunk7 ай бұрын
@@rachelinman4638 more than weed. This was toward the beginning of hard drug use. If the city could have started programs for these kids at that time, perhaps they could have been helped. Scared. No, I taught school in Philly. But, we were warned about muggings and robberies that often happened after dark. Why take the chance, right?
@gordocarbo7 ай бұрын
@@rachelinman4638 Group of hard up 20 soemthings? If just him, his wife he better be on guard.
@Evangelium7 ай бұрын
I'm really liking this in the street type recording, especially incorporating before and after shots of the same location.
@SensiProductionzBlindDogVideos7 ай бұрын
7:08 occupy was an inside job. The GOV created and controlled the whole thing. I was a part of 2010-2011 occupy Portland Maine. I could tell you stories nobody has ever heard or thought.
@JSFGuy7 ай бұрын
Right here right now, let's check it out.
@joshuaryantrucking73967 ай бұрын
Im glad this happened when i moved back to portland from florida i couldnt believe how bad it gotten up here..but i moved out of Portland last year to the country part of oregon cause i couldnt handle all the violence and homeless.. good video brother
@gregstump44507 ай бұрын
We were just in downtown for the Matt Rife show and it was nice to see some glimmer of old Portland. Quite a few people out and about and it was much cleaner, we absolutely felt safe. We had a great time walking around after the show and hit up some bomb food carts. Hoping for the best and looking forward to our next trip to P-Town!
@johnholst6 ай бұрын
Briggs; you have a great voice! It's nice to see a video where you put your face with it. Love your content! Keep up the great work!
@Cmon-Man7 ай бұрын
As an Oregon resident, I am shocked, shocked I tell ya! That wheeler voted yes and unanimous by the city council. That is twice now I have seen them do something right. First was reversing the decriminalizing of narcotics. Wow. It’s almost like they are understanding that their policies weren’t working. Shocked! 😳
@CybeleCotter7 ай бұрын
When I was there in the early 2000s, there was no homeless problem (or a very minor one) and the city was very clean and beautiful. I loved the Chinese Gardens, the Rose Gardens, the zoo and the parks, the restaurants and theaters, and especially, Powell's Books. I thought the public transportation marvelous and the Farmers Market on Saturdays great. And this was also before the Portlandia vibe took place.
@lioneaglegriffin7 ай бұрын
I remember hearing on OPB that the Joint Office of Homeless Services handed out tens of thousands of tarps and tents early on in the pandemic. They basically encouraged it.
@catherinebaum91856 ай бұрын
During covid that was the humane thing to do for crying out loud. Think about it.
@kev1n19567 ай бұрын
I am so glad I was able to move out of the area 3 years ago.
@billbissenas29737 ай бұрын
Looking forward to visiting Portland in July. Hoping my car isn’t vandalized.
@melissasmess27737 ай бұрын
Don't leave anything inside visible.
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
That is in every city. Most the homeless don't do that unless you leave a laptop or wads of cash in open view.
@LuckyBaldwin7777 ай бұрын
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs Are you sure about that? I saw a piece on skid row and the homeless there had stolen a new Maserati and were parting it out. They kept it hidden under a tarp.
@vaishx7 ай бұрын
@@LuckyBaldwin777well there’s your answer. A Maserati in Skid Row of all places? Not a good sign
@Komeuppance7 ай бұрын
They're drug addicts, not just homeless. Staying ignorant to that fact is not helpful and will lead to the situation happening all over again.
@benkirk68807 ай бұрын
I’m so ecstatic to see my favorite city returning to some sanity- I’m an Alaskan bred in Oregon who spent most summers of the coast camping near Garibaldi with my grandparents- my folks left Oregon 2019 because of the insanity
@lucorrez99917 ай бұрын
THIS IS AWESOME!!!!! Already seeing improvement!!
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
It looks great now. At least compared to 2020 to 2022
@WorldAccordingToBriggs6 ай бұрын
Still living in 2020 I see. Antifa? Really? 😂 Let it go.
@danteeudora63307 ай бұрын
Portland used to be one of my favorite cities....First visited in 2007 and fell in love. Lived there in 2014. Went there with my ex in 2018 and we had a great time. But for the past 6 years I have stayed away because of everything I have been hearing. Watching my home state of CA go to shit it wasn't hard to imagine the same happening in OR. I fled the West Coast entirely 2 1/2 years ago and have not returned. But videos like this give me a reason to hope that maybe it will be worth coming back to someday.
@markedington84827 ай бұрын
In order for them to enforced this law they would need to fund their police and have cops doing their Jobs. Last time I check they do not have cops doing their jobs.
@urmanascrewed7 ай бұрын
Glad to see improvement! I don't live there anymore, but I worked security all over downtown in 2022... not an easy security job.
@leozeek7 ай бұрын
Hey Briggs, you showed us where the homeless no longer are but, where are they now? You should do a video on that… Are they just indoors in Portland or are they moved out of the city to another scenic part of the state?
@Chi_Chi347 ай бұрын
ABOUT TIME!
@katherinez96547 ай бұрын
I live in Eugene and our streets are terrible with the homeless. I don’t even go downtown. I’ve lived here for 37 years and I would move away in a heartbeat if I could. I have family here that I care for. When the city council is so out of touch with reality it’s hard to love where you live.
@jonyjoe84647 ай бұрын
they keep voting democrat, everytime, no trump sign anywhere to be found.
@thewinefox2136 ай бұрын
Hail from VA Briggs! Thanks for the update. Portland has done a great job so far! I've been there many times, back before 2014. Glad they are taking this fine city back!!!
@RichardPoogerman7 ай бұрын
If I was ever forced into extreme poverty, the last place I would want to be is living on the street in an urban center. It's not easy to live off the land but it is possible with only minimal skills.
@FlintIronstag237 ай бұрын
A lot of the chronic homeless are drug addicts. You can't readily get meth or fentanyl living in the middle of the woods as you can in a city. You can't panhandle or shoplift in the woods either.
@edwardthompson58203 ай бұрын
I was there in the 80s. Beautiful city. Rose Garden 🌹 was super beautiful.
@elblaise56187 ай бұрын
Those are some shockingly empty streets you were walking Briggs.
@windywednesday41667 ай бұрын
Right?
@ShafreelCosmos7 ай бұрын
Great video. That is literally where I grew up most of my life. 4th and Flanders in Pacific Tower. It was always dangerous right there. I remember the “Dirty Duck” bar right next to the “Crack Press” building on 3rd and Glisan. It was funny because the city considered my building address to be apart of the Pearl District. Nothing about my building or location was anything like the Pearl District haha.
@wandahall44357 ай бұрын
Great job Briggs ❤❤❤
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
Thank you!!
@RecklessComrade7 ай бұрын
Glad to see the city ordinance is working, I hope they can keep the momentum going. Typically when camps are cleared, homeless set up their camps somewhere else. Maybe an idea for a follow up video to this, Briggs
@vietnamesebeauties7 ай бұрын
Wow, as a Vietnamese university student, I have never been to USA 🇺🇸 but Portland is so beautiful and its Chinatown's street is so clean 👍 impressed 🎉
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
It really is!
@BreadLobby7 ай бұрын
Lol i live in chinatown. It is not clean at all. I love it and its chill. But nah its mostly needles and drug tin foil and blood from people getting shot and piss staining the steeets. Still love my neighborhood tho!
@TOm-hr2mb7 ай бұрын
Do not visit the USA. It's a lost cause.
@rufust.firefly19217 ай бұрын
@@BreadLobby🤣lmao.. needles, drugs, blood and piss.. but I ❤ it😅
@GeeEm13137 ай бұрын
Our Chinatown is NOT clean. I had to dodge poop today.
@oceanbnd7 ай бұрын
Great video Braggs. Shows you have a healthy concern for your community. Good to see.
@pdxmtngoat7 ай бұрын
Unfortunately. You only focus on Downtown Portland. How's life out in outer Southeast Portland? How about Northeast Portland? My friend in Southeast Portland (Morrison) is surrounded by homeless people in his neighborhood. What about areas other than downtown?
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
We will be looking at that next month
@nancysaso43807 ай бұрын
Come on over to the lents area
@barefootincactus7 ай бұрын
I’m staying at a home in Lents and there’s homeless in the alley
@lowellpearson87827 ай бұрын
Now Eugene need's to do the same . I'm so happy that I moved form Springfield , Oregon .
@tomofnorthcal7 ай бұрын
thanks a lot for the before and after photos and video. And very glad to see big improvements in Portland because I really love Portland and hope to visit there again.
@CrystalBrightz6 ай бұрын
The homeless aren't gone, they're just elsewhere.
@nikkienikkie43107 ай бұрын
I miss our beautiful city and still have hope we can recover. I have no idea what the perfect answer is to the problem. Thank you for showcasing the improvements. I am just hoping the people who need the help are getting meaningful help.
@KrlsOtc7 ай бұрын
Why Portland mayor look like Portlandia’s Portland mayor?
@melissasmess27737 ай бұрын
Liberal diet, they look weird without eating proteins.😂
@piedpyper90347 ай бұрын
I appreciate the video briggs, my wife and I love Portland and want to move back when we can. It's nice to see that since it's lowest point in 2022 things are getting better.
@SueWhitney-y4w7 ай бұрын
Must be an election year.
@Komeuppance7 ай бұрын
Ha. No more comments needed after this statement.
@russellbonesteel11154 ай бұрын
Thank you for your interesting videos Mr. Briggs!
@ruthrecord81967 ай бұрын
WOW! I was there 2 years ago and it was SCARY. praying other cities take notice!
@M.Campbell7 ай бұрын
I was too. As I left the airport, in my rental car, I was questioning my judgement because I'd taken the extra insurance. That didn't last long. At every stop light, through down town, there were homeless guys eyeing my car like the family dog eyes the Thanksgiving turkey. I was really glad my destination was far on the outskirts of town.
@ruthrecord81967 ай бұрын
@@M.Campbell totally!!!
@PANIC_aka_PinD7 ай бұрын
It's still scary.
@janebeckman34317 ай бұрын
Seeing so many places I visited with relatives in the 1980's thru 2000's, what they became, and the attempts to bring them back breaks my heart. I do hope recovery is possible.
@MichealLiam7 ай бұрын
I'm 47yrs old. $73,000 biweekly and I'm retired, this video have inspired me greatly in many ways that I remember my past of how I struggled with many things in life to be where I am today!!!!❤️
@MichealLiam7 ай бұрын
All thanks to Renee Marie Harrison
@MichealLiam7 ай бұрын
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery (Oscar). Glory to God.shalom.
@Jessica-1v7 ай бұрын
Absolutely! I've heard stories of people who started with little to no knowledge but made it out victoriously thanks to Renee Marie Harrison.
@lorinpoik7 ай бұрын
I do know Renee M. Harrison, I also have even become successful....
@Graciezi7 ай бұрын
I really need assistance How do I reach her??
@amandarenee85627 ай бұрын
Love your videos! Long time watcher, first time commenter and am your neighbor to the south in Eugene. I’m glad to see Portland cleaning up. But I couldn’t help but laughing when you mentioned the city buying bus tickets to get the homeless out of town. As I’m sure you know it’s been an ongoing problem that neighboring cities send their homeless residents to Eugene. I hope the city of Eugene will follow Portlands lead and implement this same law. It seems to be just as bad here as it was during the pandemic but more widespread now. Except for when the Olympic track trials were going on and the city magically found a place to temporarily hide them rather than figure out a long term solution. I sympathize with the large population of people forced into homelessness due to the insane cost of living here but it’s the cities acceptance and unwillingness to do anything about the problem that I don’t understand.
@melissasmess27737 ай бұрын
Portland, Salem and Eugene are dragging our whole state down the crapper. Thank a Liberal.
@SA-hz1rs7 ай бұрын
yea, im sure the rural areas are doing great. oh wait...
@FlintIronstag237 ай бұрын
Don't blame Salem. I live here and can tell you we aren't anywhere near as liberal as Portland or Eugene. During the 2022 Governor's race, Marion County voted for the Republican candidate, unlike Multnomah and Lane counties.
@melissasmess27737 ай бұрын
@@FlintIronstag23 salem is one of the three counties responsible for measure 114 passing, a anti gun liberal town.
@FlintIronstag237 ай бұрын
@@melissasmess2773 Try doing some research before making accusations. Marion County voted AGAINST Measure 114: 57.5% to 42.5%. Multnomah County voted overwhelming FOR 114 at 74.1% which is why it passed.
@sergeberlinski7187 ай бұрын
Visited Portland in 2022 and it was so weird cause there were only homeless people in DT. I was like hey where did everyone go?? It is nice to see things turn around for this beautiful city. I can’t wait to re-visit it 🙌🏼 Go Portland!!!
@Joy4theworld7 ай бұрын
There is a significant increase on the east side of the river. I think the city just kicked them out of downtown.
@nelskrogh32387 ай бұрын
It took Mayor Ted how many years to figure this out? Also wonder what Portland's tolerance of drug use is for the public housing? Still, vast improvement.
@SkinE-Vadee-Veechee6 ай бұрын
I was downtown Portland earlier today and yes it seems to have cleaned up some. Hopefully they can encourage more businesses to come back around. Oregon is a beautiful place outside of downtown.
@romiemiller78767 ай бұрын
Albuquerque is trying to do the same thing, and. They are confiscating cell phones, tents and personal property. That just exacerbates the problem.
@danros65307 ай бұрын
@MrHmm...2024 I'm just about over this idea that it's everyone else's responsibility to pull these junky scumfucks out of theor rut and hold their hand while they find the will to stop being a burden to society. I have been homeless! I spent a michigan winter living in an abandoned building, saving the money i made from the FIRST job I could get, and I got out of that life. THIS! This STUPID idea that it's on society to subsidize the bad decisions of the individual is PRECISELY why Portland is a homeless DESTINATION! They INVITE this into the city!
@FlintIronstag237 ай бұрын
@MrHmm...2024 Or it pisses them off enough that they leave for LA or some other city that won't hassle them as much. It is not meant as a fix but as incentive to get them to move on.
@thecopperchicken80337 ай бұрын
If you want to be homeless then build camps outside of towns that have a management building that provides resources but when you make loitering and camping crimes inside the city then it fixes both problems. Good work. Portland became a homeless hub because of the legal drug use.
@DanstevGraker7 ай бұрын
"An easier choice..." To be homeless? Or to be homeless and slightly better protected from the elements? I'm not endorsing tent cities on the sidewalk, but damn. That's not the takeaway I'd be going for.
@shelleyirving20947 ай бұрын
Born and raised in Vancouver. Have worked there and that city sucks. We lived there for 15 months and sold the house in 1976. Couldn't wait to get back to Vancouver. Now we live in cowlitz County as Multnomah County has over flowed into clark county. Was married there, had 3 out of 4 kids there, and can't stand it!
@pdxmtngoat7 ай бұрын
Middle of the day. The city looks dead. Where are all the people? Downtown has a long way to go. Not the festive Portland I used to live in.
@albertogonzalez17467 ай бұрын
Everyone left due to failed liberal policies
@runningdawnwilhelm35587 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video. I have always loved the Portland area. Glad to hear things are changing for the better.
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@northerntao7 ай бұрын
Former PDX resident- visited last year for the first time in years and Naito still had some tents. I’m happy to see it cleaned up. Seattle has some work to do. I live in Kitsap now, and they’ve cleaned up the streets a bit, but it’s like whackamole. I’m not heartless, and have been close to street living myself at times. Peeps gotta go somewhere
@danros65307 ай бұрын
We were in PtOrchard about 12 yrs ago. Sadly I've seen the sickness of Seattle spread across the sound. Didn't used to be that way.
@michaelwhite86917 ай бұрын
I drive Uber in the area... A lot of those tents have just migrated to the outer areas of Portland. The state has rescinded the decriminalization of the harder drugs. It goes into effect in September. I've seen tents start to thin out once that news hit the airwaves.
@itsnick377 ай бұрын
Reminder! Don’t ever live in a democrat run hellhole! Avoid all big cities if possible.
@WorldAccordingToBriggs7 ай бұрын
Maybe they could all live in a republican run hellhole like Mississippi, West Virginia, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama, Kentucky, South Carolina, Oklahoma, and Alaska. Those are of the 10 poorest states. They also lead the country in percentage of people on public assistance.
@regen3rate7 ай бұрын
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs Yet those ppl are in blue cities.
@stevelee49747 ай бұрын
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs first of all the worst places in the southern states, they are all big cities run by Democrats. look at Montgomery,Little Rock, Memphis, Birmingham, Jackson,New Orleans .these are all poor, dangerous cities in the south guess what they’re all run by Democrats
@josearmando7267 ай бұрын
@WorldAccordingToBriggs Bro is triggered by the truth. Please tell us why liberals move to Texas, Tennessee, and even South Carolina. You named states that have potential for growth. The reason those states are so poor is because of the lack of jobs after the death of the coal industry.
@SA-hz1rs7 ай бұрын
@@regen3raterural america is poor Stop pretending we dont know this😅😅
@brianquilty6876 ай бұрын
I always enjoyed visiting Portland. I can see why you would be proud to live there.
@johnschneider66647 ай бұрын
Did the Supreme Court make their ruling on it? Arizona is waiting for their ruling before we outlaw it in Arizona