Talk:Tent city

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=General Discussion=

This blog post links to a lot of resources and embeds a bunch of recent mainstream news videos about tent cities. http://www.fundmymutualfund.com/2009/03/tent-cities-sprouting-in-sacramento-and.html There is enough material to expand the article a little. Kevin143 (talk) 04:38, 11 March 2009 (UTC)

tent city is a much more basic concept than this article describes --LegCircus 17:07, Aug 31, 2004 (UTC)

:How so? What edits would you make? --Lukobe 22:13, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC)

::Thanks for asking! I would like to see the page talk about Hooverviles and Reagan Ranches and the Harvard Living Wage tent city and there must be tons more history to this form of protest. Additionally I imagine there are standing tent city (shanty towns?) that do not have protest as there primary reason for being.

::I'll wait for your ideas before moving forward. I look forward to your imput.

::--LegCircus 22:35, Aug 31, 2004 (UTC)

:::I see what you mean--you mean you're wondering "where's the content on tent cities in general?" Good question. It's probably out there somewhere, and if it isn't, should be added. The Seattle-area information is here because "Tent City" is the actual proper name of the local encampments. If you wrote an article about tent cities in general this article could probably be moved to "Tent City (King County, Washington)" or something similar.

:::--Lukobe 23:15, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC)

::::Additional generic uses of the "tent city" term are (1) in the military, for large groups of tents set up to house troops, supplies, etc., usually deep in a "rear area" and semipermanent in nature, with strong perimeter security; and (2) any temporary encampment, either impromptu or planned, to accomodate numbers people in a political protest, for instance. If I could write it better, I'd just edit that into the article.

:::::Personally, I'd rather see the general info at tent city, or something like temporary housing communities, as an article that did the subject justice over a sufficient time-span, world-wide, would really overwhelm this one. I do agree the general topic is very worthy of an article. Ah, it looks like we have a decent start at Shanty town, which may be a good enuf title, just needing some redirs and links to it etc. Niteowlneils 22:02, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

:This is true. One particular example, the Kensington Welfare Rights Union (needs article) has a long history of erecting tent cities, which recently have been termed "Bushvilles" but in the mid-'90s were simply called "Tent City." But this term is in fact often used generically rather than referring to a particular location. NTK 06:29, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)

=Article Bias=

While generally well written, this article shows partisan bias against the Seattle Tent Cities and those who advocate them. The first half or so isn't bad at all, but the political point of view becomes more and more strident through the second half. It would be great to see it touched up to either show no bias one way or the other, or perhaps add a section describing the arguments that the proponents and opponents espouse, as well as who the principal proponents and opponents are. I don't have any expertise or experience on this topic, live thousands of miles away from Seattle, have no prior knowledge (or, I hope, bias) on this topic, and I've never been active in any of politics related to it.

:Agreed on the bias. The article could also use a little more organization. It also seems a bit heavy on the Tent City 4 information, much of which will probably become irrelevant over time. I'm not saying that is bad, just that it would be nice to have more information about Tent City 1, 2, and 3. Nobody appears to have touched this in a while, so I'll put it on my watchlist and try to take a stab at it myself. --Tuxmelvin 21:20, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

:It used to be much less biased before a major overhaul by one anon[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Tent_City&diff=5926989&oldid=5915758]. Agree it's way too POV now. Niteowlneils 22:02, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

::It would seem some relevant and interesting information was eliminated in that overhaul, some of which ought to be reintroduced to the article. Tuxmelvin 22:42, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

:::I re-introduced the bit about some homeless people having jobs, and tried to remove some more of the POV and add more balanced info sources. Nice job on the edit where you split the TC4 controversy from the main content, etc. BTW. Niteowlneils 01:35, 24 Nov 2004 (UTC)

This article seems to be full of disinformation, and I'm not sure what is fact and what isn't, so I'm not removing anything without checking it out first. I think information about Tent City, how it works, etc, ought to be seperated from the controversy surrounding it. --Tuxmelvin 23:23, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I reverted the edit by 67.161.112.231 due to the fact that the revision reintroduced POV. I also think it introduced a few valid points, and may have even been a better read, but given that it's purpose was clearly to reintroduce POV, no matter how pretty, I simply reverted it. I also added a few of the valid points. I think it is of note that the current location is very close to 3 public schools, for example. I honestly think the fight over permits, etc., is completely unworthy of mention. The only people that care are those who are opposed to Tent City 4. It is not something that will be noteworthy a year from now, beyond a mention that SHARE/WHEEL has not been consistent about permits. This article needs more about what Tent City is, and not what peoples opinions are. Just for the record, I live on Finn Hill and am generally opposed to Tent City 4's relocation here. That is why I take an interest in it. But I also take interest in the impartiality of this article. --Tuxmelvin 03:25, 28 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Extended Discussion

One thing I'd like to mention - a quote from the controversy section:

"Executive Sims added five members to the commission and filled them with Homeless advocates. As a result no real work was done by the commission and that caused the report representing the views of special interest groups and not the citizens as intended."

This is far from impartial. First, we have an assumption that no real work was done. Source? Secondly, even if we go ahead and assume that no real work has been done, the words "as a result" imply that those homeless advocates had something to do with the lack of progress. How do we know that? Again, looking for a source. Preferrably not from the "Tent City Solutions" website, whom have been against the current Tent City program in the Seattle area from the very beginning. Pilaremo 05:07, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

:Agree on the lack of impartiality. It may have resulted in the views of the special interest groups, but work was done. Bobblehead

:: The reason for that statement in the report was the fact the "final report" was drafted from information supplied by county staff, not with direction from the commission. The commission was guided by staff to see only this information and efforts by commission members to provide additional information (the documentation of criminal activity, police reports, even eye witness's) were suppressed. The commission was formed by the council with the intent of "Citizens" being appointed by their council members to represent them. The Executive turned it into a mess by adding 5 "at large" members and then loaded up the commission with representatives of the special interest groups that were providing stateholder input on the commission to form the executives 10 year plan to end homelessness. If you wanted to create a shill commission you would do EXACTLY what the executive did. The "opposition group" you refer to has been involved in every commission, every cities process for drafting their rules, and represnted every community that TC4 has moved to. It is used as a vital resource for information by city, county councils, and the media. It has the credentials and legitimacy as a source even though those supporting the special interest group running the camps don't like them. It is understandable why. Even one of the biggest supporters of TC4 stated recently in a public hearing that reason TC3 moves around Seattle without problems and TC4 is mired in controversy is because TC4 was created to do just that as it is a political venture. -- Coz

:::Then cite the report filed by Tent City Solutions, its conclusions, and remove the bias from the article (which I just did). Unfortunately, the wording used in the noted section is one that is only shared by those opposed to Tent Cities and would not be one that is shared by those that approved of CACHE's actions and the results of that report. Basically a directly violation of Wikipedia's Neutral Point of View policy. --Bobblehead 04:13, 22 May 2006 (UTC)

:::: Tent City Solutions did not file a report. It is posted on their web site because, despite being directed to by the council, executive staff refuses to acknowledge the existance of the report. The wording that you posted was predetermined text provided by the executives staff in advance of the commissions work and does not represent the council, commission, or pretty much anyone not tied into trying to validate the agenda of SHARE. I will work on rewording that section again later. -- Coz

:::::Re-word away. Just make sure you source. Preferrably not to the Tent City Solutions site. ;) --Bobblehead 07:02, 22 May 2006 (UTC)

No mention of refugee camps

This seems like a very significant omission. Dalf | Talk 06:20, 13 May 2007 (UTC)

Nickelsville

I've updated the paragraph on Nickelsville (they are on the move today). The citation style in that paragraph is something of a mess; I have not taken it up on myself to fix it. - Jmabel | Talk 06:59, 5 March 2009 (UTC)

[[Maricopa]]

Tent city in Maricopa County Jail, headed by Sheriff Joe Arpaio, is missing. --Klare Kante (talk) 01:22, 25 December 2011 (UTC)

Merger with Shanty Town

Isn't Tent City just a euphemism for shantytown or slum? I suggest a merger.203.184.41.226 (talk) 01:13, 12 March 2013 (UTC)

Heading text

Camp Quixote, Olympia, Washington

Camp Quixote is a tent city, that from its inception in February 2007, practices a self-governed community with logistical support and sponsorship by PANZA, a Thurston County collaboration of faith communities, individuals and organizations. Camp Quixote began as a protest by homeless advocates and the homeless as a protest response to Olympia City ordinances which prohibited "sitting on the sidewalks". The Olympia Unitarian Universalist Congregation offered sanctuary to the tent city residents when the city officials ordered them to dismantle the camp. Other faith communities joined in the effort; transforming an adversarial community issue into a gradual acceptance of the camp residents and their nomadic 90-day rotation condoned by a new ordinance enacted by the major cities - Olympia, Tumwater, Lacey and Thurston County. Thanks to the persevering work of PANZA, Camp Quixote will be in its new permanent home --- Quixote Village, providing permanent supportive housing to 30 residents. — Preceding unsigned comment added by "CQ22007" (talkcontribs) 22:14, 22 June 2013 (UTC)

Tent Cities United States Camp Quixote, Olympia, Washington

Heading text

Camp Quixote, Olympia, Washington

Camp Quixote is a tent city, that from its inception in February 2007, practices a self-governed community with logistical support and sponsorship by PANZA, a Thurston County collaboration of faith communities, individuals and organizations. Camp Quixote began as a protest by homeless advocates and the homeless as a protest response to Olympia City ordinances which prohibited "sitting on the sidewalks". The Olympia Unitarian Universalist Congregation offered sanctuary to the tent city residents when the city officials ordered them to dismantle the camp. Other faith communities joined in the effort; transforming an adversarial community issue into a gradual acceptance of the camp residents and their nomadic 90-day rotation condoned by a new ordinance enacted by the major cities - Olympia, Tumwater, Lacey and Thurston County. Thanks to the persevering work of PANZA, Camp Quixote will be in its new permanent home --- Quixote Village, providing permanent supportive housing to 30 residents.

Move to [[homeless camp]]

The term "tent city" is colloquial but it isn't as apt and to-the-point as homeless camp. The current term also confuses the idea of a homeless camp with a refugee camp, and while there may be some equivalence, the idea is that homeless camps are akin to slums, while refugee camps are managed by military, and sometimes integrated with military camps. The idea of using the term "tent" perhaps comes from the idea of separating homeless camps which use tents, and more permanent camps which use other materials and which are considered to be somewhat permanent. The term "city" is inaccurate, as these are not really "cities," regardless of how large they are. -Inowen (nlfte) 07:32, 19 September 2018 (UTC)

Move to "Homeless encampments"

By 2024, as the issue of homelessness has been researched in greater depth, the term "homeless encampment"{{emdash}}which is more neutral and descriptive in tone{{emdash}}is often used by academics and researchers. Homeless encampment can include semi-permanent as well as temporary shelters, not just tents, and as a result in also used by journalists covering relevant stories.{{Cite news| issn = 0362-4331| last = Austen| first = Ian| title = Some Homeless Encampments Can Stay, but the Underlying Issues Remain| work = The New York Times| access-date = 2024-02-13| date = 2023-02-04| url = https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/04/world/canada/some-homeless-encampments-can-stay-but-the-underlying-issues-remain.html}}{{Cite web| title = Homeless encampments are growing again in Toronto| access-date = 2024-02-13| url = https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/homeless-encampments-are-growing-again-in-toronto-as-the-city-faces-a-surging-crisis/article_83795fa0-e8bd-5001-93e7-6cccdb6b4190.html}} For example, the term, homeless encampment" includes makeshift structures and even vehicles. As more and more people, including the working poor and retirees, are unable to find affordable housing, they are turning to homeless encampments. In reports such as this Canadian 2024 report{{emdash}}which is a part of a series on Income Research Paper, and is published by the Canadian Human Rights Commission{{emdash}}the term is used to discuss the social, economic, and policy implications of these types of living arrangements.{{cite Q|Q124526633}}{{cite Q|Q124526746}}{{cite Q|Q124526827}}{{Cite web| title = Homeless encampments are growing again in Toronto| access-date = 2024-02-13| url = https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/homeless-encampments-are-growing-again-in-toronto-as-the-city-faces-a-surging-crisis/article_83795fa0-e8bd-5001-93e7-6cccdb6b4190.html}}

In her 2024 report, the Canadian Federal Housing Advocate, Marie-Josee Houle, wrote that, "In the context of the review, the terms “homeless encampments” or “encampments” refer to temporary outdoor accommodations for individuals and groups of unhoused and unsheltered individuals that have been established – often without permission – on public property or privately-owned land. The growth in number and size of such encampments is the consequence of a severe lack of accessible, affordable, and adequate housing. The Advocate recognizes that there are often challenges with terminology , but has chosen in her Interim Report to use the language which is most commonly in use for now. She recognizes, however, that the term homeless encampments may not reflect everyone’s reality and differs from terms commonly used internationally, such as informal settlements."

It is noteworthy that the articles cited here that use the term "tent city" date from the 1990s and early 2000s. The entire article List of tent cities in the United States cites mainly RSs that do not use the term "tent city"; they use the term "homeless encampments".Oceanflynn (talk) 22:39, 13 February 2024 (UTC)