Groups work to move homeless across downtown
The local Chamber of Commerce is working on a strategy to move homeless youth downtown from SW 3rd and Stark to SW 5th and Alder.
It’s thought that nearly 60 staffers from City Hall, nonprofits and the business community will be working on the plan. It’s the group’s goal to create a process that will take somewhere in the ballpark of 400 hours to develop, several public hearings and create a divided public.
“It’s our hope that the new law created through this process will be in place for 16 months before being ruled unconstitutional,” says one business rep. “That’s four months longer than the first three plans we came up with. We’ll take it.”
Businesses are upset because the City of Portland doesn’t currently have sunset laws for homeless youth that represent a certain “dark” culture.
A spokesperson for My Shelter Is Better Than Yours, a nonprofit working with homeless adults, says they’ve recently become experts on homeless youth who hop trains and listen to punk rock. “They’re devil worshippers. We want them out!”
Another nonprofit who works to end poverty overseas says they feel more comfortable in places like Iraq than downtown Portland. They’ve recently hired the Pinkerton’s to run the tramps out of town and to keep the riffraff off their doorsteps.
Food cart owners have promised that if something isn’t done soon they will form a vigilante group and take the law into their own heads.
Homeless youth say they plan to protest by playing jug music 12 hours a day in high-traffic areas with their dogs. “We’ll also get really high,” said one youth.
Private security companies who provide security downtown for a budget-strapped police bureau declined to comment on the new policy, saying only, “We’re open for business.”
Business group gives anti-business workshop at conference
A Portland business group recently put on a workshop titled, “Why Portland sucks for business” at a national conference meant to recruit new businesses to the area.
The workshop focused on the pitfalls of living in a city full of liberals and communist electives.
“We’re really upset that Portland electives don’t do a better job at attracting businesses to Portland,” says one of the workshop presenters. “We travel around the country letting people know that our streets are overrun with hoodlums. It’s astonishing to us why people don’t want to come here to do business. We blame the local government for spending so much money on social programs and not enough money on doing exactly what we want them to do.”
Asked why there are not more Fortune 500 companies in Portland, a spokesperson for the business group says, “It’s clearly the lack of compassion for what big business can give back to the community.”
“We hate it in Portland,” said one business executive who traveled with the group. “The people are so liberal it makes me sick. We’re going to go back and demand that City Hall does more to recruit new business to the region. If they aren’t with us, they’re against us.”
This article is part of Street Roots' annual satire edition released each year for April Fools Day.