Sound Stories. Sound Voices.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
You are on the KUOW archive site. Click here to go to our current site.
00000181-fa79-da89-a38d-fb7f2b910000KUOW is joining forces with other Seattle media outlets to highlight the homeless crisis in the city and region on Wednesday, June 29, 2017.The effort was modeled after a collaboration by more than 70 San Francisco outlets to focus a day of news attention on the issue and possible solutions.Read more about the Seattle project and check out our coverage below. Follow the city's coverage by using #SeaHomeless.HighlightsThe Jungle: an ongoing coverage project going into the notorious homeless encampment under Interstate 5.Ask Seattle's Homeless Community: KUOW is launching a Facebook group where anyone may ask a question about homelessness, but only people who have experienced it may answer. This was inspired by a recent event KUOW co-presented with Seattle Public Library and Real Change, where residents of the Jungle answered audience questions. No End In Sight: an award-winning investigative project from KUOW about King County's 10-year plan to end homelessness.

She dreamed of van life. Now she’s homeless in Seattle

Rebecca Massey drove up from Oklahoma expecting to get a job, find a place and save up some money. She said she didn’t intend on being homeless.

“I know there’s some perception that people come to Seattle seeking all the resources that they give to homeless people. I didn’t come here anticipating receiving any of those services.”

Massey has an art degree and a dream of traveling around the country in a converted van selling her art. But her van was stolen.

“It spiraled down from there,” she said. “It got increasingly hopeless. I spent a lot of lonely nights asking myself what I’m going to do.”

Massey was living under the West Seattle Bridge in a group of unauthorized RV campers when the city swept them out earlier in May. She said she’s been swept – the term used when the city clears out a homeless encampment – four times in the nine months she has been in Seattle.

This experience of being swept is traumatic, she said. “You don’t really know where you’re going to go because there’s not a place to go.”

There are city-authorized sites around Seattle, including Camp Second Chance in Sodo, where Massey is now a resident. But she said some don’t want to live in these places because of the rules or perceived lack of freedom.

She’s making new friends, but misses the community she had, where people watched out for her and the group had communal meals.

“I just feel like I’ve left behind some people and I’ve let some people down,” Massey said. “I feel like I want to have a place and have my own interests, but I feel like I’m being selfish, too, because these other people aren’t getting their needs met.”

Massey said the city isn’t accomplishing anything by performing these because it’s the same groups of people being moved around the city. Instead, she said, there need to be more low-barrier options and services for homeless people.

“Until someone is homeless and in that situation, I guess they won’t understand. But it’s not just a matter of, oh well, they’re just lazy, or they’re not smart enough, or they made bad choices.

“That’s really unfair, I think, to reduce it to just ‘it’s their fault they’re homeless.’ It’s not farfetched for anybody to be homeless.”

Produced for the web by Kara McDermott.

Year started with KUOW: 1985 – 1986, 1991 – 2004, 2012
Year started with KUOW: 2015