A luxury Pearl District apartment tower is trying to make the City of Portland pay up over a nearby overnight homeless shelter, arguing the city-backed facility has turned the surrounding blocks unsafe, unsanitary and less desirable for residents. The owner has filed a formal tort claim and warned that a full-blown lawsuit is coming if the city does not fix what the building describes as worsening street conditions.
The Oro apartment complex is accusing the city of “inverse condemnation, nuisance and negligence,” according to KPTV. Attorney John DiLorenzo, representing the building, told reporters the owner expects concrete changes and set a March 15 deadline for city leaders to respond.
What the claim says
In January the building’s ownership hired private investigators to stake out the blocks around the shelter. Their work produced a 48-page security report that, according to the claim, shows near-daily open drug use, people passed out on sidewalks, and accumulating trash and biological waste in the streets nearby.
The tort claim seeks roughly $5 million in damages and directly links those conditions to the operation of the low-barrier, overnight shelter, according to a KOIN video report.
City response
Mayor Keith Wilson is not exactly siding with the luxury landlord. He argues the shelter is part of a broader strategy to cut down on street camping by giving people a place to sleep indoors, even if that shift is bumpy in the short term…