Homeless Camp Is Just Blocks From Park Hill Home Of Hickenlooper Who Said He Would End Homelessness; Advocates Demand The Homeless ‘Liberate’ Hick House For Use By All

by Glen Richardson

When the pandemic hit Denver last year and layoff climbed, the lack of affordable housing resulted in homeless encampments growing exponentially. As encampments multiplied, the problem began spreading to surrounding neighborhoods.

That’s where this story begins. More precisely in Denver’s Park Hill, a community that rivals Riverside Dr. in New York, the Auteuil and Passy in Paris, and Mayfair in London. The neighborhood was designed to showcase Mayor Speer’s Beautiful City Program. U.S. Senator and former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper has a $2.5 million home here. With homes selling in five days or less, 52 homes and two condos were for sale last month, listed from $285,000 to $1,975,00.

This month an encampment with 45 shelters serving 50 people opens in a parking lot behind the church at 5209 Montview Blvd. The arrangement is scheduled to remain at least until Dec. 31. Homeless are being moved here from Capitol Hill. Suddenly, the plight of those living on the streets becomes intimately linked to the well-being of everybody else living in the neighborhood.

Hick’s Hood: Park Hill neighborhood was designed by landscape architect Fredrick Law Olmsted. Many of the neighborhoods first residences were designed by Fisher & Fisher.

Serenity Of Home

Hickenlooper, who as a U.S. Senator, spends much of his time in Washington, D.C. — the nation’s No. 1 homeless city — likely looks forward to returning to his Montview Blvd. home surrounded by an abundance of mature trees, lushly landscaped medians and generous setback. But with a homeless encampment moving within a block of Hick’s home he may soon be scanning Yelp reviews for a highly rated real estate agent.

The paradox is that Hickenlooper declared he would “end homelessness” with his Denver’s Road Home initiative in 2005. It was a miserable failure. An audit released in April 2019, by Denver Auditor Timothy M. O’Brien, CPA, concluded: “A lack of a cohesive overall strategy along with unclear authority and understaffing hindered the city’s ability to comprehensively address homelessness or measure the effectiveness of its efforts.”

The audit revealed that in 2018, the Metro Homeless Initiative identified 3,445 individuals experiencing homelessness. Around $37 million was budgeted for homeless services in 2018 and in 2019. Denver increased that to more than $51 million. In a warning seemingly still being ignored, O’Brien said, “Millions of dollars won’t help solve the problem if we aren’t tracking data and aligning our policies from organization to organization to support the use of the city’s resources.”

Camp Hick

Some homeless advocates are demanding that Hickenlooper make available his home to the denizens of the new Park Hill Safe homeless encampment. They point out the homeless will need places to go during the day and do not want to be stuck in a hot asphalt parking lot in the summer and what better than the green expanses of the Hickenlooper home. In the winter he could open up his home while he is off in Washington, D.C. “He promised to end homelessness in 10 years but failed miserably,” said David Johnson. “Opening up his home to the new Park Hill homeless residents is the least he could do to start making amends and if he won’t then the homeless should just go down there and take it over.”

Upset Neighbors Go To Court

Whether Hickenlooper is upset or not, other Park Hill residents are distraught and troubled. In the most significant attempt ever to block the establishment of the camping site, a group of Park Hill residents sued the nonprofit Colorado Village Collaborative, Park Hill United Methodist Church and the City of Denver to stop the neighborhood camping site. Residents in neighborhoods such as Globeville and Elyria-Swansea have vocally argued against camping sites, but this is the first lawsuit.

A temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction was filed by attorneys Heather Anderson Thomas and Douglas W. Baier on behalf of five plaintiffs on May 6. The site has not met the requirements set out by the city, according to the complaint filed by five Park Hill residents.

The lawsuit stated the proposed site “poses a real danger to minors and school-aged children, does not address the impact it will have on the neighborhood, and displaces people from an area with available resources to an area not equipped to handle the purposes of the camping site.”

Just 13 days after the injunction was filed, Denver District Court Judge A. Bruce Jones dismissed the lawsuit asserting that the plaintiffs had not exhausted all of their administrative remedies to the Denver Board of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals. The plaintiffs indicate they are now filing such an appeal but note that the camp will be in before the appeal is even heard.

Colorado Village Collaborative and Park Hill United Methodist Church celebrated the ruling with a joint statement declar

ing “we are grateful to the many Park Hill neighbors who have already opened their arms to receive their newest neighbors by expressing their support, opening their wallets, swapping recipes that will feed a crowd, and committing to volunteer on an ongoing basis.”

Not All Residents Hostile

Some residents in Park Hill believe that they must demonstrate their progressive values. They indicated that they would be willing to bake cookies and brownies for the new Park Hill homeless. Terrell wrote on Westword’s Facebook: “I am mortified today to say I am from Park Hill. That said, there are literally hundreds of us actively planning how we will welcome these brothers and sisters, and truly demonstrate what a privileged neighborhood can be capable of, beyond hate.”

Preschool Steps Away

The homeless encampment will be just a few feet from the Children’s Center at Park Hill United Methodist Church. The pre-school offers half-day, full-day and after school programs. There are three public schools in the neighborhood, Park Hill Elementary School, The Goddard School of Denver and Odyssey School of Denver.

Residents in the Capitol Hill neighborhood where the encampment is being relocated from claimed that Morey Middle School near the site became a safety issue. “Tents lined the public-right-of-way between the street and the sidewalk outside of the school, and there were baskets and boxes filled with belongings.

Lara Lee Hullinghorst, a lobbyist and daughter of former Colorado Speaker of the House Dickey Lee Hullinghorst, said she was scared to walk out of her apartment without her husband or a friend after a man grabbed her arm and threatened to rape and kill her. She wasn’t certain, but believed the man lived in the camp across the street.

Church Champions Justice

Completing final preparations to share their space with unhoused homeless, Park Hill United Methodist Church — also home to Temple Micah — has a long history of supporting racial and social justice. They’ve offered sanctuary to immigrants and refugees.

Moreover, they have been hosting women experiencing home

 

lessness for years through the Women’

Modern Skid Row: Denver’s homeless population is now at nearly the 10,000 mark, resulting in city adding more and more camping sites such as this, left. This type of encampment is coming this summer to Park Hill United Methodist Church, right.

s Homelessness Initiative.

Rules for the camp ask their new homeless residents to, “Be a good neighbor and treat private property, schools, children and families with respect.” Guidelines include no violence, weapons, drugs, or alcohol. Theft, fires, disruptive behavior, and trading and selling substances are forbidden. Whether any or all of these admonitions will be observed is unknown.

Today’s Hoovervilles

For most of us the magic thing about home is that it feels good to leave, and it feels even better to come back. Unfortunately, today in Denver many citizens can’t afford to come back.

Denver currently ranks 42nd in the nation when it comes to providing affordable housing for its low-income residents. As a result, every night, thousands of our fellow Denverites are forced to sleep on the streets without the warmth, safety, and security that so many of us take for granted.

As if harkening back to the Hoovervilles of the Great Depression, these settlements have become fixtures known as encampments.

Today Denver’s homeless population is 9,619, or 16.7 homeless people per 10,000 residents, according to a new study by website Porch.com. The website says the share of the homeless population in Colorado is now the 10th highest rate among the 50 states.

Share This