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Bill To Turn Hotels And Motels Into Housing, Shelters Heads To Gov. Kate Brown’s Desk

State Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Medford, urged his colleagues to vote for the housing bill. Here he listens to arguments on the floor of the Oregon Senate in January 2019.
Bradley W. Parks
State Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Medford, urged his colleagues to vote for the housing bill. Here he listens to arguments on the floor of the Oregon Senate in January 2019.

A measure to allow the easy conversion of hotels and motels into emergency shelters and long-term affordable housing for people who lost their homes in the wildfires or who are otherwise unhoused sailed through the Senate on Monday.

A measure to ease the conversion of hotels and motels into emergency shelters and long-term affordable housing for people who lost their homes in the wildfires or who are otherwise unhoused sailed through the Senate on Monday.

Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ashland, urged his colleagues to vote for the bill, pointing out that Oregon continues to have one of the highest rates of unhoused people in the nation.

“We might or might not agree that we share a humanitarian and moral obligation to do everything we possibly can to reduce this crisis ... but I do think every one of us is aware that this crisis will be a continuing hemorrhage on our state budget,” Golden said on the floor.

The bill would pave the way for converting motels or hotels into emergency shelters or long-term affordable housing even if current zoning laws would prohibit doing so. The building must, however, be within the city’s urban growth boundary.

The vote in the Senate was 19 in favor, 8 opposed. The bill has already passed the Houseand now heads to Gov. Kate Brown’s desk.

Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, said she was worried about the lack of flexibility in the bill and whether it’s “in concert with local governments” or rather “highly prescriptive” where local governments are now required to convert hotels and motels.

Sen. Lynn Findley, R-Vale, echoed those concerns, saying making the projects mandatory is not what lawmakers initially agreed was the best course of action.

He pointed out a family with small children could end up on a busy commercial street, which is not ideal for long-term affordable housing.

There are other similar housing efforts underway in the state, including what has been dubbed Project Turnkey, where the state carved out $65 million to buy and convert motels into temporary shelters. House Speaker Tina Kotek also has a bill, House Bill 2006, that would allow local governments to waive design, planning and zoning regulations to approve the siting of emergency shelters.

Copyright 2021 Oregon Public Broadcasting. To see more, visit Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Lauren Dake is a political reporter and producer for Oregon Public Broadcasting. Before OPB, Lauren spent nearly a decade working as a print reporter. She’s covered politics and rural issues in Oregon and Washington.