Op-Ed: True compassion requires the ability to intervene before harm becomes entrenched

Washington’s homelessness crisis is one of the defining challenges of our time.

Thousands of people across the state are living outside, many struggling with untreated mental-health conditions, drug addiction, or the impossibility of affording housing in an increasingly expensive market. No one disputes that the current situation is untenable. But House Bill 2489 is not the answer our communities need. Supporters call it compassion, but compassion means helping people off the streets and into stability — not creating new barriers that leave more people living and dying outside.

The bill would sharply restrict how cities can respond to homeless encampments by prohibiting enforcement unless “adequate shelter” is available at that exact moment. While the bill outlines a long list of requirements for what qualifies as adequate shelter, the core issue is simple: the standard is so narrow and so difficult to meet that it will prevent cities from acting at all.

And that is where the real harm begins.

HB 2489 would erode the quality of life in communities across Washington by limiting when encampments can be removed, even when conditions are unsafe. It adds layers of state-mandated procedures before any intervention is permitted, stripping local governments of the ability to act quickly when public health, public safety, or basic human dignity is at stake.

- Advertisement -

Cities would be forced to stand by as tents multiply in parks, on sidewalks, near schools, and in front of businesses — not because they lack compassion, but because the law would tie their hands. The result will not be fewer people living outside. It will be more deaths, more drugs, and more dangerous encampments, with outreach workers and first responders left to manage the fallout.

This is not compassion. It is paralysis.

From the perspective of organizations like The More We Love, which work daily inside encampments and crisis-response settings, prolonged inaction carries grave consequences. Large, entrenched encampments often become environments where drug trafficking and human trafficking intersect, placing the most vulnerable at extreme risk. Women, youth, and people struggling with addiction are frequently exploited, coerced, or controlled through violence, drugs, and fear. When encampments are allowed to persist without timely intervention or clear pathways indoors, they do not remain static humanitarian spaces; they become increasingly dangerous for the people living there, for outreach workers trying to help, and for the surrounding community.

True compassion requires the ability to intervene before harm becomes entrenched—not after tragedy has already occurred.

Communities across Washington understand that homelessness is a drug crisis, a housing crisis, a behavioral-health crisis, and an affordability crisis all at once. Addressing it requires coordination, investment, and flexibility. HB 2489 undermines that flexibility by imposing a one-size-fits-all mandate on cities with vastly different resources and needs.

And while the bill’s intent is to prevent the criminalization of homelessness, its practical effect is to normalize unsheltered living. People living outside face higher rates of violence, illness, and exploitation. Encampments that cannot be addressed quickly become entrenched, making it harder, not easier, to connect people with services and pathways indoors.

- Advertisement -

Communities have made progress when they have invested in real solutions: on- demand services, enhanced shelters, addiction and mental health resources, and permanent supportive housing. These approaches work because they offer structure, services, and a path to stability. HB 2489 offers none of that. It focuses on limiting enforcement rather than expanding capacity.

Washington needs a statewide strategy that increases shelter, treatment, and housing — not a statewide restriction that prevents local governments from responding to dangerous or deteriorating conditions. The bill asks cities to do less at the very moment when they need to do more.

Homelessness is solvable, but only if we focus on what actually moves people indoors. HB 2489 may be well-intentioned, but it is not the right approach. Our state deserves policies that build housing, expand services, and create real exits from homelessness. Anything less is just managing the crisis instead of ending it.

Jared Nieuwenhuis is a member of the Bellevue City Council. He was first elected to the council in November 2017.

Kristine Moreland is the Founder and Executive Director of The More We Love, a nonprofit focused on helping individuals experiencing homelessness, addiction, domestic violence, and trafficking.

About this commentary: The opinions expressed by the authors are their own and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the entire Bellevue City Council.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Sports betting bill still alive in Georgia House

(The Center Square) – A bill that would allow...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Education Department finds SJSU in Title IX violation

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Education’s...

Chicago mayor visits D.C., considers order to prosecute federal agents

(The Center Square) – Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says...

WA Senate passes bill banning law enforcement from wearing masks amid ICE activity

(The Center Square) - The Washington State Senate advanced...

Homeless count in Nevada expected to be short of reality

(The Center Square) - Nevada will conduct its unsheltered...

$1,000 Trump accounts to start July 4

"Trump accounts" will launch beginning July 4, President Donald...

House panel OKs Colorado congressman’s energy bill

(The Center Square) - Lawmakers behind legislation making its...

Students return to campus following Palisades Fire

(The Center Square) – The Los Angeles Unified School...

Students Sue After N.C. Elections Boards Remove Campus Early Voting Sites

(AURN News) — College students in North Carolina are...

More like this
Related

Education Department finds SJSU in Title IX violation

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Education’s...

Chicago mayor visits D.C., considers order to prosecute federal agents

(The Center Square) – Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says...

WA Senate passes bill banning law enforcement from wearing masks amid ICE activity

(The Center Square) - The Washington State Senate advanced...

Homeless count in Nevada expected to be short of reality

(The Center Square) - Nevada will conduct its unsheltered...