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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.

State Budget Could Fund Contentious Fence Around The Jungle

The Jungle, the morning after five people were shot at the homeless encampment. Officially the East Duwamish Greenbelt, everyone calls it The Jungle.
KUOW Photo/Gil Aegerter
Officially the East Duwamish Greenbelt, everyone calls this homeless encampment the Jungle.

Washington state lawmakers have passed the supplemental transportation budget. It is now headed to Governor Inslee's desk for approval.

How to spend a chunk of that money is a contentious topic in Seattle: $1 million is set aside for safety improvements at the Jungle homeless encampment. That money could be used to build a fence around the camp under Interstate 5.

Sen. Reuven Carlyle (D-Seattle) suggested a fence early on, but others scoffed at that plan. He's now suggesting other ideas too, not just a fence.

Carlyle: "For lighting, for access [because] police and the fire department can't even access critical parts of the Jungle area. As well as some limited uses of protective barriers or fencing to make sure that people are not getting on the highway."

Seattle City Councilmember Lorena Gonzales has publicly criticized the fence idea as a way of helping the homeless.

Gonzalez: "When you are desperate, then you will cut a fence, you will dig under a fence, you will breach that fence in any way possible, and I think that recognizing that as a policy maker is part of my responsibility."

She said a better approach is to make safety upgrades and improve human health services.

It is up to the state's transportation department to decide how to use the money.