Skip to page content
  • Go to the main menu
  • Go to the search form
Metro

Main menu

▼
Open menu
▲
Close menu
  • Parks + Venues
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Parks
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Oxbow Regional Park
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Camping at Oxbow
      • Blue Lake Regional Park
      • Smith and Bybee Wetlands Natural Area
      • Graham Oaks Nature Park
      • Cooper Mountain Nature Park
      • Mount Talbert Nature Park
      • Scouters Mountain Nature Park
      • Chehalem Ridge Nature Park
      • Canemah Bluff Nature Park
      • Newell Creek Canyon Nature Park
      • Orenco Woods Nature Park
      • Killin Wetlands Nature Park
      • Howell Territorial Park
      • Mason Hill Park
      • Broughton Beach
      • Glendoveer Golf Course and Nature Trail
      • Farmington Paddle Launch
      • Boat ramps
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Chinook Landing Marine Park
        • M. James Gleason Memorial Boat Ramp
        • Sauvie Island Boat Ramp
      • Disc golf course

      • Parks and nature activities
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Guided nature activities
        • Nature learning resources
      • Picnics and special use
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Picnics at Blue Lake
        • Picnics at Oxbow
        • Picnics at Graham Oaks
        • Picnics at Mount Talbert
        • Picnics at Scouters Mountain
        • Picnics at Chehalem Ridge
        • Caterers and amusement providers
        • Special use permits
      • Water safety
      • Pets policy
      • Hunting policy
    • Venues
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Oregon Convention Center
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Oregon Convention Center hotel
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Jobs and job training
          • Economic impact
          • Global reach
          • Hotel progress
      • Oregon Zoo
      • Portland Expo Center
      • Portland'5 Centers for the Arts
    • Historic cemeteries
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Services and fees
      • Visit the cemeteries
      • History of Metro's cemeteries

      • Brainard Cemetery
      • Columbia Pioneer Cemetery
      • Douglass Cemetery
      • Escobar Cemetery
      • Grand Army of the Republic Cemetery
      • Gresham Pioneer Cemetery
      • Jones Cemetery
      • Lone Fir Cemetery
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Chestnut Grove Memorial Garden
      • Mountain View Corbett Cemetery
      • Mountain View Stark Cemetery
      • Multnomah Park Cemetery
      • Pleasant Home Cemetery
      • Powell Grove Cemetery
      • White Birch Cemetery
    • man and boy walking on trail at Oxbow Regional Park
      Buy a parks pass
  • Tools + Services
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Tools for Living
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Garbage and recycling
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Find a recycler
        • Find your hauler
        • Metro Central transfer station
        • Metro South transfer station
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Metro South trash cam
        • Code of conduct
        • Prep your load and pay less
        • Recycling at home
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Home recycling collection
          • Glass
          • Metal
          • Plastic
          • Paper
          • Christmas tree recycling
        • Reducing waste at home
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Waste-wise holidays
          • Stop junk mail
          • Back to school tips
        • Neighborhood collection events
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • 2025 neighborhood collection event schedule
        • Report dumped garbage
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • RID Patrol work transition program
        • Ask an expert
      • Healthy home
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Household hazardous waste disposal
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Adhesives and glues
          • Aerosols
          • Air fresheners and deodorizers
          • Ammunition
          • Antifreeze
          • Arts and crafts supplies
          • Asbestos
          • Batteries, auto
          • Batteries, household
          • Bleach
          • Brake fluid
          • Carpet and rug cleaners
          • Chemistry sets
          • Cleaners, all-purpose
          • Degreasers
          • Detergents, dishwashing or laundry
          • Disinfectants
          • Drain cleaners
          • Fertilizers, chemical
          • Fingernail polish and remover
          • Flea control
          • Gasoline, kerosene and diesel fuel
          • Hair products
          • Hand cleaners, mechanic or painter
          • Lighter fluid, charcoal
          • Lubricating oils
          • Medicines, unwanted or expired drugs
          • Mercury- and PCB-containing items
          • Moss killer
          • Mothballs and moth crystals
          • Motor oil and oil filters
          • Oven cleaners
          • Paint and clear wood finish
          • Paint strippers or paint scrapings
          • Paint thinners
          • Paint, water-based
          • Pesticides
          • Photographic chemicals
          • Polishes and cleaners, metal
          • Polishes and waxes, wood furniture and floors
          • Polishes, cleaners or waxes, automotive
          • Polishes, shoe
          • Pool or spa chemicals
          • Septic tank cleaners
          • Smoke detectors, ionizing type
          • Soot remover or creosote destroyer
          • Stain and spot removers
          • Transmission fluid
          • Windshield wiper solution
          • Wood preservatives
        • Green cleaning
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Air fresheners and deodorizers
          • All-purpose cleaners
          • Aluminum cleaners
          • Antiseptic soap spray
          • Bathroom soft scrub
          • Bronze, brass and copper cleaner
          • Chrome cleaner
          • Coffee maker cleaner
          • Countertop and appliance top cleaner
          • Dish soap
          • Disinfectants
          • Drain cleaner
          • Floor cleaners
          • Glass and window cleaners
          • Hand cleaner
          • Laundry bleach
          • Laundry cleaners
          • Leather cleaner
          • Oven cleaners
          • Scouring powder and paste
          • Silver cleaners
          • Spot and stain removers
          • Toilet bowl cleaners
          • Tub and tile cleaner
          • Urine stain removers
          • Wall cleaner
          • Wallpaper cleaner
          • Wet spotter
          • Windshield wiper fluid
          • Wood cleaners
          • Wood furniture polish
        • Home pest control
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Ants
          • Asthma, pests and pesticides
          • Cockroaches
          • Fleas and ticks
          • Fruit flies
          • Mice and rats
          • Moths
          • Spiders
        • Buying safer cleaners
        • Safe personal care products
        • Storm and fire cleanup
        • Online learning
        • MetroPaint
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Retail locations
          • Colors and product information
          • MetroPaint Outlet
          • MetroPaint virtual painter
            +
            Open this submenu
            −
            Close this submenu
            • Living room
            • Bedroom
            • Dining room
            • Entrance
            • Upload a photo
      • Yard and garden
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Learning gardens
        • Garden basics
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Soil amendments
          • Mulch matters
          • Soil prep for your edible garden
          • Watering tips
        • Garden problems
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Azalea lace bug
          • Aphids
          • Cabbage butterflies and leaf miners
          • Mosquitoes
          • Moles, voles and gophers
          • Slugs and snails
          • Yellowjackets
          • Wildlife issues
          • Lawn moss
          • Black spot, rust and rot
          • Powdery mildew
          • Weeds
          • Proper disposal of pesticides
        • Lawn
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Mow
          • Grow
          • Water
          • Weed
          • Lawn alternatives
        • Plants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Native plants
          • Plant a shrub
          • Plant a tree
          • Fall and winter gardening
          • Growing roses
          • Getting started with edibles
        • Backyard habitat
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Beneficial bugs
          • Pollinators
          • Protecting songbirds
          • Feeding and caring for wildlife
        • Composting
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Composting methods
          • Tips for composting success
          • Compost trouble-shooting
          • Build a compost bin
          • Worm composting
          • Worm bin trouble-shooting
        • Grow Smart, Grow Safe
        • Garden pledge
    • Tools for working
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Asbestos information for transfer station customers
      • Guide to construction salvage and recycling
      • Guide to managing paint waste
      • Guide to recycling and waste reduction at work
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Guide to choosing single-use service ware
      • Business hazardous waste disposal program
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Business hazardous waste disposal signup
      • Reducing food waste
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Preventing food waste
        • Donating food
        • Composting food scraps
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Composting options outside the Portland metropolitan area
        • Food scraps separation policy
        • Local success stories
      • Regional contractor's business license
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Contractor's business license application and renewal
        • Contractor's business license lookup
      • Tools for haulers and facility operators
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Accounts for haulers
        • Construction waste
        • Special waste disposal
        • Regional solid waste facilities
        • Forms for solid waste facilities
        • Rules, procedures and guidance
        • Solid Waste Information System
        • Solid waste authorizations
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Solid waste facility complaint form
          • License for Grimm’s Fuel Company
            +
            Open this submenu
            −
            Close this submenu
            • Updates
        • Solid waste enforcement
        • Public notices for garbage and recycling facilities
      • Travel options for employers
    • Tools for Partners
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Grants and resources
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • 2040 planning and development grants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Past grant cycles
        • Brownfields assessment grants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Background
        • Civic engagement grants
        • Climate pollution reduction planning grants
        • Community enhancement grants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Metro Central Enhancement Grants
        • Community Placemaking grants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • How to apply
          • 2023 grantees
          • 2022 grantees
          • 2021 grantees
          • 2020 grantees
          • 2019 grantees
          • 2018 grantees
          • 2017 grantees
        • Cooling corridors study
        • Housing and homelessness resources
        • Investment and Innovation grants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Past grant cycles
        • Landlord incentives
        • Large-scale community visions
        • Local share
        • Nature grants
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Capital grants
          • Community choice grants
          • Community stewardship and restoration grants
          • Nature education grants
        • Parks and Nature community partnerships
        • Partnerships and social innovation program
        • Regional Refresh Fund
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Frequently asked questions
        • Regional Travel Options program
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Safe Routes to School program
            +
            Open this submenu
            −
            Close this submenu
            • Safe Routes to School safety campaign toolkit
        • Transit-Oriented Development Program
      • Guides and tools
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Community Investment Toolkit
        • Designing livable streets and trails
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Conversations about performance-based design
        • Economic Value Atlas
        • Greater Portland Economic Recovery Plan
        • Guide to equitable housing
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Build Small Coalition
        • Jurisdictional transfer assessment
        • Local transportation system plans
        • Mobility Corridors Atlas
        • Planning parks with communities of color
        • Regional Traffic and Transportation Class
        • Safe Routes to School Framework
        • Site readiness toolkit
        • Social Vulnerability Explorer
      • Education resources
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Resource conservation and recycling education
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Elementary school classroom presentations
          • Middle and high school classroom presentations
          • Distance learning
            +
            Open this submenu
            −
            Close this submenu
            • Elementary online learning
            • Middle and high school online learning
            • Community and family online education
          • Publication library
          • Community workshops and events
          • Meet the educators
      • Data Resource Center
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • RLIS Live
        • MetroMap
        • Aerial photography
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Regional Aerial Photo Consortium
        • Unmanned Aircraft System program
        • Annexation and boundary changes
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Annexation search tool
    • Small thumbnail of a Metro map
      Regional Land Information System
  • What's Happening
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Metro News
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • All Metro news
      • Housing news
      • Land and transportation news
      • Parks and nature news
      • Home and garbage news
      • Venues news
      • Resources for journalists
    • Public projects
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Willamette Cove cleanup and nature park
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Site history
        • Park planning
        • The cleanup
      • Future of Supportive Housing Services
      • Tualatin Valley Highway transit project
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Community engagement
        • Equitable development
        • Steering committee
      • 2024 growth management decision
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Expansion proposal
        • Roundtable
        • Youth cohort
      • Regional housing coordination strategy
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
      • Expo Future project
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Phase two
        • Development information
        • Project background
        • Site history
      • Blue Lake Regional Park improvements
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Project updates
        • Timeline
      • Affordable housing bond program
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Progress
        • Site acquisition
        • Background
        • Racial equity
        • Oversight
        • Common questions
      • Supportive housing services
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Progress
        • Racial equity
        • Regional coordination
        • Funding
        • Oversight
        • Stories
        • Common questions
      • Supportive housing services tax
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Tax preparer resources
        • Tax data and analysis
        • Codes and rules
      • 2028-30 Regional flexible funding allocation
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Funding priorities
        • New project bond
        • Step 2
      • 82nd Avenue transit project
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Development strategy
        • Steering committee
      • Community connector transit study
      • Regional Transportation Demand Management strategy
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Regional goals
        • Timeline
      • Honoring untold stories at Lone Fir Cemetery
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Community engagement
        • Timeline
        • Patient recognition
      • Parks and nature investments
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • About
        • History
        • Funding
        • Vision
        • Equity
        • Oversight
        • Leadership
      • Regional system facilities plan
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Background
        • Engagement
        • Values and outcomes
        • Gap analysis
        • Scenario development
        • Draft plan
      • Bulky Waste collection service improvements
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Bulky waste policy
        • Collection study
      • Metro's commitment to Black lives
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Policing
    • Calendar
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • calendar pictogram
        View meetings and events
    • Subscribe
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • newspaper pictogram
        Get news by email
  • About Metro
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Regional leadership
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • What is Metro?
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Cities and counties in the region
      • Metro Council
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Council President Lynn Peterson
        • Councilor Ashton Simpson
        • Councilor Christine Lewis
        • Councilor Gerritt Rosenthal
        • Councilor Juan Carlos González
        • Councilor Mary Nolan
        • Councilor Duncan Hwang

        • How to give testimony
        • Find your councilor
      • Metro Auditor
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • About the Metro Auditor
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Mission and authority
          • Process
          • Auditing standards
          • Audit Committee
        • Audits
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Audit recommendations
        • Accountability Hotline
      • Metropolitan Exposition Recreation Commission
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Commissioners
        • Materials archive
      • Metro advisory committees
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Committee on Disability Inclusion
        • Committee on Racial Equity
        • Future Vision Commission
        • Joint Policy Advisory Committee on Transportation
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • How to give testimony
          • Meeting materials archive
        • Metro Policy Advisory Committee
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • How to give testimony
          • Meeting materials archive
        • Metro Technical Advisory Committee
        • Public Engagement Review Committee
        • Regional Waste Advisory Committee
        • Smith and Bybee Wetlands Advisory Committee
        • Transit-Oriented Development Steering Committee
        • Transportation Policy Alternatives Committee
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • TPAC materials archive
          • TransPort
      • Diversity, equity and inclusion
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Know your rights
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Complaint procedures
        • Accessibility at Metro
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • ADA public notice
          • Request an accommodation
          • Accessibility projects
          • Website accessibility
          • ADA grievance procedure
            +
            Open this submenu
            −
            Close this submenu
            • File an ADA complaint
        • Language hub
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Arabic
          • Cambodian
          • Chinese
          • Hindi
          • Hmong
          • Japanese
          • Korean
          • Laotian
          • Nepali
          • Persian
          • Romanian
          • Russian
          • Somali
          • Spanish
          • Tagalog
          • Telugu
          • Thai
          • Ukrainian
          • Vietnamese
        • Public engagement
        • Equity strategy
        • Equity Dashboard
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Workforce demographics
          • Job classifications
          • Employment status
          • Payscale
          • Recruitment
          • Retention
        • Construction Career Pathways
      • Public records
    • How Metro works
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Organizational structure
      • Finances and funding
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Financial reports
        • Metro budget
        • Property tax information
        • Income tax information
        • Investment Advisory Board
      • Metro Code
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Metro administrative rules
      • Green Metro
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Green Metro featured projects
      • Contract opportunities
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • Current requests for bids and proposals
        • Doing business with Metro
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Large construction contracts
        • Equity in contracting
      • Jobs
        +
        Open this submenu
        −
        Close this submenu
        • How to apply
        • Benefits
        • Pay
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Classification descriptions
        • Labor unions
        • Diversity and equity
        • Training and development
        • Veterans' preference
        • First Opportunity program
        • Internships
          +
          Open this submenu
          −
          Close this submenu
          • Applying for internships
          • Types of internships
          • Garbage and recycling internships
        • Variable hour jobs
    • Library
      +
      Open this submenu
      −
      Close this submenu
      • Land use shelf
      • Transportation shelf
      • Nature shelf
      • Garbage and recycling shelf
      • Regional research shelf
      • Archives and special collections
    • photo of boats at Blue Lake
      Metro by the numbers

Search form

Metro News

Subscribe
 
  • Tagalog

“I never thought this would happen to me”: When homelessness happens later in life

Older man weaing a puffer vest over a t-shirt, sitting in the countyard of an apartment complex.
Metro logo

“I never thought this would happen to me”: When homelessness happens later in life

By Lauren Everett
Nov. 26, 2024 3:18 p.m.

Bylined articles are written by Metro staff and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Metro or the Metro Council. Learn more

One Friday night in late September, hundreds of people gathered at Portland’s Newmark Theater to attend the premiere of No Place to Grow Old – a documentary about the growing crisis of homelessness among older adults. The film was produced by a Portland-based nonprofit called Humans for Housing and follows three elder Portlanders, two of whom are experiencing homelessness and a third who is on the verge of losing his housing.

Michael Larson founded the organization after graduating from college in Spokane, where he studied sociology, explored documentary filmmaking and volunteered with the unhoused community. His interest in addressing homelessness comes from his own experience growing up in the foster care system, where many are at risk of homelessness or housing insecurity after they age out of foster care.  

 “We knew we wanted to make a film about homelessness to help humanize people in Portland,” Michael said. “As we began working with and connecting with organizations in this space — and looking at the statistics around Multnomah County and in Portland, but also across the nation — what continued to come up was the issue around older adults.”

Portrait of a young man in a blue t-shirt with trees in the background
Michael Larson founded the nonprofit Humans For Housing to humanize people experiencing homelessness in Portland and spark discussion around solutions.

A crisis unfolding

As Michael discovered, recent research has predicted a “silver tsunami,” where the number of older adults experiencing homelessness nationwide is expected to increase dramatically, far exceeding the capacity of the social safety net. In a 2019 paper, University of Pennsylvania researcher Dennis Culhane and his colleagues analyzed data in three major cities and found that the population of older adults is expected to grow two and a half to three times by 2030.  

According to Culhane, this is a “birth cohort” issue, disproportionately impacting people born in the latter half of the baby boomer generation, between 1955 and 1965. Demographer Richard Easterlin theorized that higher numbers of poverty and homelessness among this population is due to an excess supply of workers at the time they were first entering the labor market, in addition to multiple economic recessions in the 1970s and 1990s, reduced union membership and deteriorating social safety net. Race and racism also play a role: Black men had an unemployment rate of nearly 25% in 1983 — almost double the rate ten years before and after that time.

Today, one in five (20%) older adult households nationwide are renters, and those numbers are higher for Black (37%) and Latine (34%) households. For the millions of seniors who depend on social security income, monthly benefits are unable to keep up with the cost of living, and particularly the large rent increases happening in areas across the country.  

Incomes typically decline over time as one ages, connected to changes like retirement, reduced work hours or death of a spouse. Medical issues that come with older age can prevent someone from working or make it difficult to find suitable work before they reach retirement age, while adding additional expenses for the household. Due to these factors, the number of cost-burdened older adults (households who pay more than 30% of their income for housing) is at an all-time high.  

By now, the predicted tsunami has arrived: about 50% of single adults experiencing homelessness are age 50 or older, up from only 11% in the early 90’s. And more people are experiencing homelessness for the first time in their later years than ever before. In a recent study on elder homelessness in Oakland, Calif., nearly half of participants lost their housing for the first time when they were over age 50, typically due to one or more destabilizing crises they didn’t have the resources to manage.  

People who have already experienced homelessness in their younger years are more likely to have serious medical or behavioral health issues; in fact, chronically homeless adults typically have the biological health of a housed person 20 years older.  

To address this crisis, Culhane and other researchers recommend a combination of different types of programming to serve homeless elder adults: short-term, long-term and emergency rent assistance, combined with a level of case management that fits each person’s needs.

A regional response

In 2020, Metro voters approved the supportive housing services measure to fund these types of programs. Metro distributes tax revenue to Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington Counties, who contract with nonprofit organizations to serve community members who are experiencing housing insecurity or homelessness.  

Northwest Pilot Project is one of Multnomah County’s 70 contracted SHS service providers. They have been serving low-income elder Portlanders for 55 years with services like housing case management and homelessness prevention.  

These days, about three in four people who reach out to the organization for support have recently received a rent increase they can’t afford. “There is a certain level of desperation and people just not knowing what they're going to do next,” said Northwest Pilot Project’s Housing Access Manager Jason Coulthurst, “and really feeling terrified of the prospect of becoming homeless.” As Jason explained, many people want to work, but struggle to find jobs that pay enough to cover their rent. “I hear from a lot of them [that] they feel that there's real age discrimination happening against them,” he said. 

Portrait of a middle-aged man with black collered shirt and glasses, standing on a tree-lined downtown street.
Jason Coulthurst is the Housing Access Manager at Northwest Pilot Project. He has been with the organization for 18 years.

For program participants who are already experiencing homelessness when they are connected with the organization, the loss of housing was often triggered by a catastrophic event like the death of a partner, loss of a job, car accident or onset of a chronic illness or condition. To add to the challenges, the healthcare system offers few resources for low-income people who need intensive support.  

Now, thanks to Metro’s SHS fund and its regional long-term rent assistance program, Northwest Pilot Project is expanding its program to provide permanent supportive housing to over 100 people.  PSH combines housing with a long-term rent subsidy (participants pay 30% of their income for rent and utilities) and intensive case management for individuals who have experienced prolonged homelessness and have at least one disability.

With the PSH program, the organization can do “more than just get [people] into housing,” explained Permanent Supportive Housing Manager Lila Pearman. “We help them keep their housing by having dedicated people working with small caseloads and providing those services.” Six case managers support program participants as they face the challenges that often come with aging, like cognitive and physical decline.  

In addition to the rent subsidy and intensive case management, SHS funding has also enabled Northwest Pilot Project to offer resources like meal delivery, housekeeping, and mental health services. According to Lila, participants have typically experienced homelessness for one to ten years and often struggle with navigating systems to meet their basic needs.  

Northwest Pilot Project Executive Director Laura Golino de Lovato described the impact of the SHS fund as “transformational.” The regional long-term rent assistance vouchers are “incredible,” she explained; “they have done more for eviction prevention and housing stabilization for our clients than anything but a [federal] Section 8 voucher, which is hard to get.”  

Before voters passed the SHS measure, the organization had to patch together different funding sources to support clients who were facing homelessness. Funds were limited, which meant the organization could only help a small portion of people in need. They could also only offer a rent subsidy temporarily, with an understanding that the participant had to move into the first available low-income apartment that met their accessibility needs.

This often meant a long period of uncertainty and anxiety for someone who was already struggling, as the end of funding loomed in the distance, and with it, homelessness. Additionally, participants sometimes had to relocate to new homes far away from their communities and support networks. This could mean moving more than once, as a participant tried to find long-term housing that was a better fit.

“There are so many seniors that we talk to that are being priced out of their homes,” said Jason. “They want to stay where they're at. And sometimes moving them several times to get into stable housing - it feels kind of cruel to do that to somebody.”  

With the RLRA vouchers, program participants can access market rate rental housing immediately, or they can choose to stay where they are if they’re currently housed. They also have the flexibility to move to housing that better meets their needs as they evolve over time, and to live in areas where they have community ties. “When someone gets to go back to the neighborhood they haven't been able to afford for the last 15 years,” Lila reflected, “that’s a huge win.”

Metro’s RLRA program was modeled on the organization’s 2018 long-term rent assistance pilot program, which ran for a period of 18 months with funding from Meyer Memorial Trust. The program was the vision of Northwest Pilot Project housing advocate Bobby Weinstock. According to an evaluation of the program by a third-party research firm, “many [participants] reported gaining feelings of optimism, hopefulness, and excitement for the future, and some described this as a shift from ‘surviving’ to ‘living.’”

Northwest Pilot Project has also been able to offer more competitive wages for staff thanks to SHS funding. This is critical in a field that is “100% relationship-based,” Laura explained. Participant success is increased by creating and maintaining trust with support staff, which means employee retention is vital to the organization’s mission.  

As of this fall, nearly 2,900 households in Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington counties are living in stable housing with RLRA vouchers. 

Perry’s Story

Perry was born and raised in the Albina area of Portland, where he has deep community roots and many family members. He is 67 years old, and at age 59, experienced homelessness for the first time.

Perry had been living with his mother, and when she passed away, wasn’t able to stay in their home. His family bonded together after their mother’s death and he was able to sleep on siblings’ couches for a while. This made things a little easier, but “it’s not like having your own place,” he explained. “I always had to worry about unnecessary stuff — other people's problems — and I'm too old for that stuff.”  

Perry started sleeping outside, in his car, and tried shelters — which he found overcrowded and uncomfortable. He was also struggling with intermittent with pain from a previous injury that resulted in metal in his elbow and neck.  

Five years ago, with Northwest Pilot Project’s help, Perry moved into his North Portland apartment. It’s the longest he’s had his own place. “That was major for me,” he reflected, “just being able to be responsible enough to pay the bills, to have the money — because I never had the money.”   

When Perry first started working with the organization, he remembers them having compassion for what he was going through. They helped him overcome barriers like previous evictions so he could qualify for the apartment.  

He’s been working with his current caseworker Nick for a year now. “It's hard to put him in a bag and say what he is,” Perry said of Nick, “he’s all things at the right time.” Nick has helped Perry improve his credit, fix his car when it needed repair, set up a medical alert device, and get a HOP card for public transit. He has also supported and encouraged Perry to become more comfortable on the computer so he can be more self-sufficient. 

A young man and an older man in the courtyard of an apartment building. They are looking at a document together and there is a cotton candy machine in the background.
Perry and his caseworker Nick consider summer event options for Perry's cotton candy business. Perry's case management and rent assistance is paid for through Metro's supportive housing services fund.

Mostly importantly, Nick calls just to check in. Sometimes when Perry is feeling upset about something this prompts him to reflect and process. It’s good to have someone you can trust. “You really can tell him anything,” Perry explained.

Last summer, with Nick’s support, Perry started a seasonal cotton candy business to earn some extra income and stay engaged with his community. He continues to volunteer regularly as a cook at Loaves and Fishes — a nonprofit that provides hot meals to seniors. As a person of spiritual faith, giving back to the community is important to him: “Being in service; that's part of the faith walk,” he said. “To not always think that you got to get something in return.”

Kenny’s Story  

Kenny was born in Portland and lived most of his life in rural communities outside the city. He worked for the Department of Defense in the Army and Navy and then ran four adult foster care homes with his partner before they got divorced. After that chapter ended, he went back to school and earned a degree in horticulture but struggled to find work in his new field.  

Several years ago he was living in an apartment in Gresham, but when the landlord raised the rent from $535 a month to $1,835, he had to move. The problem was, there weren’t any market rate apartments he could afford on his social security income.  

Kenny moved into a friend’s house in Welches but lost his housing again when there was a major fire due to arson that left the house uninhabitable. He bought an RV and parked it in his parents’ driveway for six months until his parents sold the house. He had housing lined up so he sold the RV, but when that fell through, he started living in the woods, public parks and the Springwater Corridor Trail.  

One day while visiting the library, Kenny heard about the Native American Youth and Family Center. With Indigenous Alaskan heritage on his father’s side, Kenny reached out to NAYA and a case worker moved him into a motel for six months until Emmons Place — where he now resides — opened. 

Middle aged man siting on the steps in an apartment building courtyard. He's wearing a brown sweatshirt and brown pants.
Kenny live in Emmons Place in Northwest Portland, a new affordable apartment community with 48 apartments designated as permanent supportive housing. Kenny's rent assistance and case management are paid for by Metro's supportive housing services fund.

At Emmons Place, Kenny lives in permanent supportive housing with services from Northwest Pilot Project. Like Perry, he pays one third of his income toward rent and utilities. Kenny's case worker Bill connected him with a discount on his utility bills and monthly food boxes. “Anything I need I just ask Bill,” Kenny explained, “but I got everything I need, so I don't ask.” Looking to the future, Kenny would like to find a regular volunteer opportunity where he can put his horticulture skills to use.

Kenny is grateful for a stable place to live, but worries if something changes with these resources he’ll be homeless again. Seeing many vacant apartments in new buildings downtown, Kenny reflected, “we don’t have a homelessness problem, we have a housing problem.”

Looking toward the future to meet a growing need  

“We're housing more and more people and getting them into stable housing,” Michael said, thinking about what he learned making No Place To Grow Old, “But why does our population continue to actually increase? That's because our inflow is still at a higher rate than our outflow.” That’s why, he explained, it’s so critical to look at the role of the housing market and escalating rents. No matter what event or events lead to the loss of home, inability to continue paying rent is a near constant thread.  

Northwest Pilot Project staff believe an expanded rental voucher system is needed to address the growing crisis of homelessness among older adults. The RLRA voucher program prioritizes people with the highest need, which is a great start. But there are, as Laura explained, so many seniors who don't need supportive services but who simply cannot pay the rent.  

Rent vouchers are “the most upstream solution to homelessness you can find,” she said. “You stabilize someone's rent and they will not become homeless…You know that they're going to be stable, and then you are saving so much time and resource because you are not working with them on an ongoing basis.”

Doing this work for the past eight years, “I am always so incredibly amazed by the resilience and hope and positive attitude that so many of our clients have when they're facing just a really horrible situation,” Laura reflected. “I think that's why all of us at Pilot Project do this work: it could be us [or it] could be your parent or cousin or sister.”

Read more about the growing crisis of homelessness and housing instability for older adults

Related stories 
A new day for housing and homelessness services in Clackamas County
Woman in floral print blouse standing in front of flowering shrubbery and smiling at the camera.

A new day for housing and homelessness services in Clackamas County

Read more

Permanent supportive housing transforms lives across greater Portland
Woman dressed in all black standing in front of an apartment building smiling.

Permanent supportive housing transforms lives across greater Portland

Read more

Denise and Dachea’s story: finding friendship and support in Oregon City
Three women sitting around a picnic table in a community garden admiring a small dog.

Denise and Dachea’s story: finding friendship and support in Oregon City

Read more

 

Footer Menu

▼
Open menu
▲
Close menu
  • Services of Metro
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Oregon Zoo
    • Oregon Convention Center
    • Portland Expo Center
    • Portland'5 Centers for the Arts
    • Data Resource Center
    • Garbage and recycling facilities
    • Metro cemeteries
  • Opportunities
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Jobs
    • Contracts
    • Grants
    • Franchising and licensing
  • Access
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Know your rights
    • Accessibility at Metro
    • Language assistance
    • Feedback and questions
    • Metro Accountability Hotline
    • Privacy policy
    • Request public records
    • Directions
  • Leadership
    +
    Open this submenu
    −
    Close this submenu
    • Metro Council
    • Metro Auditor
    • MERC
    • Committees
    • Who's my councilor?

Metro logo

Whether your roots in the region run generations deep or you moved to Oregon last week, you have your own reasons for loving this place – and Metro wants to keep it that way. Help shape the future of the greater Portland region and discover tools, services and places that make life better today.

Contact Metro

  • 503-797-1700
  • 503-797-1804 TDD
  • Send a message

Connect with Metro

Subscribe to Metro News

More subscription options

Find Metro on

Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn Instagram