What a Coordinated System Could Look Like

We have a nonsystem created by plastering more layers of dysfunctional bureaucracy onto the previous layers that have failed. A picture speaks a thousand words, reflecting the non-system we have established, better referred to as “chaos” (Current Homelessness And Outreach System).

The solution to homelessness is not as complicated as we’re making it. Though the problem of homelessness is seemingly intractable, the approach to ending it is actually straightforward.

Proposed Results Driven Coordinated New Structure

To the right, instead, is a rational continuum aligned with the proper supports, stakeholders and funding streams. This is the model we must move toward.

It is a matter of defining a comprehensive shared vision with meaningful goals, a clear chain of command, and an effective and accountable governance structure led by independent subject matter experts. To date Multnomah County has done none of these things, but they are eminently doable. 

A detailed flowchart of Portland's current Homelessness and Outreach System, called CHAOS. It includes organizations like Metro, Multnomah County, and Portland, with various groups managing oversight, health, safety, emergency response, outreach, and housing services for homelessness. The chart features boxes with labels like City Manager, Public Works, and Housing Policy, interconnected with arrows, illustrating roles, responsibilities, and coordination among multiple agencies and committees.

Current Multnomah County Homeless Response System

Flowchart diagram illustrating the Homelessness to Housing Planning and Command Center, its connections to various regional and organizational entities, and components such as prevention, outreach, shelter services, transition, and housing support.

Proposed Results Driven Coordinated New Structure

What a Coordinated System Could Look Like

We have a nonsystem created by plastering more layers of dysfunctional bureaucracy onto the previous layers that have failed. A picture speaks a thousand words, reflecting the non-system we have established, better referred to as “chaos” (Current Homelessness And Outreach System).

The solution to homelessness is not as complicated as we’re making it. Though the problem of homelessness is seemingly intractable, the approach to ending it is actually straightforward.

To the right, instead, is a rational continuum aligned with the proper supports, stakeholders and funding streams. This is the model we must move toward.

It is a matter of defining a comprehensive shared vision with meaningful goals, a clear chain of command, and an effective and accountable governance structure led by independent subject matter experts. To date Multnomah County has done none of these things, but they are eminently doable. 

A Yiddish word, farpotshket, does a great job of encapsulating the problem in Multnomah County– it refers to efforts to fix things that end up making them worse. The hopelessly convoluted diagram of current Multnomah County’s “homelessness response system” shows why.