Saturday, January 16, 2021

Cold and Homeless Amid the Virus in Corvallis




Homeless Amid the Virus


“If you really want to help these people, go get them some firewood, they’re freezing,” say’s a Corvallis citizen as he uses sticks, twigs, and branches to build a small fire in front of a medium sized tent, in which sits a rosey checked blonde women, swaddled in blankets. She does not speak to strangers on this almost freezing Saturday afternoon, at the official Corvallis homeless camp sites, underneath the downtown hwy. 34 bridge. Many of residents of this area are resistant to talk, and decline to give their name.



Below the hwy. 34 ramp in downtown Corvallis, January 9th. 


The property is owned by the City of Corvallis, in which this land is provided to those who are homeless and wish to stay, as long as they keep it clean (more official information to come on this). There is a large blue dumpster that is provided at the edge of the northwest sidewalk along the property, near the skatepark; “as long as we keep it clean, we can stay here,” says local homeless tenant, Vern Jones. 


Jones is a Corvallis local, who has been homeless in the area for 10 years. When asked if he’s seen an increase in the homeless since the pandemic, Jones says, “There used to be maybe ten tents here, now there are forty.” Jones is “an alcoholic,” which “helps keep him warm.” He has no family, and the locals here only “tolerate him,” says the Corvallis citizen who doesn't disclose his name.


This portion of the campsite is quite large, containing at least 15 tents in the main area. There are piles of clothes, trash that’s been bagged up, bikes, tables, and everyone is bundled up and blatantly cold, trying to make a fire in front of their tent. 



Vern Jones and company attempt to build a fire underneath the hwy. 34 ramp in downtown Corvallis, Saturday, January 9th. 


To the south side of the camp there are other tents who’ve spread out individually, nestled in the base of trees and grassy fields. They seem to have means other than fire to keep warm, such heat lamps aglow in their tents. What they are doing to get electricity to power these lamps is still not clear. 



Tent to the south of the camp, build within the trees. Saturday, January 9th.  


Another young man who chooses not to reside among the camp, is 23-year-old “Piano Man” or “KeyBoard Kid” Damian Scott. “I don’t like the energy of it all [the downtown camp], so that’s why I sleep in the doorway [of a Corvallis store front].” 

Scott has been a street performer for 11 years, where he plays unknown, unheard, and unwritten music on his keyboard to the public. He’s been living in Portland and Corvallis for “a couple of months'' after coming here from Kansas. He plans to stay here “at least throughout the winter”. 

“What’s different [among the pandemic] is I’ve had to figure out where most of the people are, like the places that most people go to, to play music outside to earn my way. Like at maybe the post office or grocery stores. That’s something different. Downtown drags aren’t usually alive with people just walking around anymore,” says Scott. 

He taught himself how to play music, without ever learning to read it. Playing his keyboard is his only means of survival, and with the pandemic keeping musicians at bay, Scott has been facing basic survival needs. Traveling around the city and country with his almost four-foot keyboard, a blanket and sleeping bag equally as large, and a backpack; These are his only belongings, and he sleeps on cardboard to “keep the cement from sucking out the cold”. 


Damian Scott plays his own written music on the streets of downtown Corvallis, Saturday, January 9th. 

Editors Note: If you are a student at Linn-Benton Community College and are struggling with housing, food, utilities, education costs, and more, know there are resources out there easily accessible for you. You can access these resources through Roadrunner Resources, on the LB official website, where you will find a quick questionnaire to help LB determine the best way to help you and get resources to you quickly. Please visit https://www.linnbenton.edu/student-services/other-resources/roadrunner-resource-center.php to receive assistance with food, housing, bills, text books, electronics for school, and more.







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