Tag: Cultivate Initiatives

City-Sponsored Sidewalk Cleaning Along Business Corridors

Cleanup crews from Central City Concern (CCC) began providing basic sidewalk cleaning services in Montavilla’s major business corridors in October. The Public Environment Management Office (PEMO), part of Portland Solutions, contracted with the employment opportunity program operator to improve conditions around neighborhood economic centers, aiming to create safer, more welcoming spaces. The rollout’s timing coincides with the critical holiday shopping season when small businesses depend on customers coming out to local storefronts and shopping within the community.

A cleanup crew member in a bright yellow jacket pushes a trash can along NE 82nd Avenue, with a large sign advertising 'FREE VACUUM AFTER WASH' in the background, indicating a car wash service.
CCC crew member Victor Leon collecting litter from NE 82nd Ave and Glisan St

In November alone, CCC Crew 3 removed 8,820 pounds of trash from City sidewalks in Montavilla and parts of East Portland. Cleanup crews work on a fixed schedule determined by need and resources, using trikes in areas closer to the city center and logoed trucks farther out in areas with larger volumes of trash. With this new program, contractors visit Portland’s busiest locations to clean up trash and biohazards from sidewalks on a weekly, bi-monthly, or quarterly cadence, depending on conditions in the area, and adjust their schedule based on demand. In the Montavilla area, workers will maintain SE Stark Street from 76th to 82nd Avenues, 82nd Avenue from SE Stark Street to NE Pacific Street, and NE Glisan Street from 81st to 84th Avenues. Crews will also maintain a well-used route to school along NE 82nd Avenue from NE Thompson Street to NE Klickitat Street.

A Central City Concern truck labeled 'Portland Solutions' parked with bags of trash, a broom, and other cleaning equipment visible in the back.
CCC and Portland Solutions logoed truck already half full of removed trash

In addition to CCC, PEMO contracts with Cultivate Initiatives in areas further east of 82nd Avenue. The citywide program focuses on spaces where people walk to school, work, shop, and enjoy neighborhood amenities. Cleaning crews sweep sidewalks, pick up litter, clean biohazards, and pressure wash outdoor surfaces when needed. The staff will also remove graffiti from city-owned street elements, including bike racks, utility meters, and trashcans. In addition to improving conditions on impacted streets, the funds support homeless-to-work employment programs that provide opportunities for people seeking pathways to stability and long-term employment.

A crew member from Central City Concern wearing a bright yellow hoodie and blue gloves is cleaning up trash along a sidewalk, using a tool to pick up litter.
CCC crew member Charlie Smelser collecting litter from NE 82nd Ave by Montavilla Park

CCC crew member Charlie Smelser explained that his group parks the truck at a central location within the assigned areas, then the three to four-person crew fans out with rolling trash cans to collect any improperly discarded items from public spaces. He noted that they also check the condition of city-owned trash cans to ensure people have functional options for disposing of trash.

PEMO’s expanded efforts built upon a 2024 collaboration in the Gateway Service District, with the City developing the concept and managing contracts. A three-year partnership between the City of Portland, Multnomah County, and TriMet funds the work in Gateway, with each partner contributing $100,000 a year for its initial duration. Primary funding for the augmented cleanup area, including Montavilla, comes from PEMO’s $1.7 million annual budget allocation by the Portland City Council.

A cleanup crew member wearing a bright yellow 'CLEAN START' hoodie pushes a trash bin on a sidewalk in an urban area, with a traffic light and street signs visible in the background, as a person stands nearby.
CCC crew member Charlie Smelser crossing NE 82nd Ave at NE Glisan St

Collecting litter is an endless cycle, but without regular cleanings, well-traveled locations show signs of neglect. This city service can help keep visible areas of Portland cleaner and more welcoming, while supporting small businesses that often lack time and funds to clean the public spaces. Funding for this expanded cleanup depends on Portland Solutions’ budget and support. However, its perceived success could encourage the adoption of a sidewalk cleaning program as a permanent City service, much as a Jade district trial program led to the 2020 expansion of public trash cans across Portland. People can expect to see cleanup crews in the City’s business districts performing basic sidewalk cleaning into 2026 as the program continues to develop.


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Day Services Open at Former 82nd Ave Church

On March 21st, PDX Saints Love held a ribbon-cutting ceremony marking the beginning of new day services at the former Saints Peter & Paul Episcopal Church property. In a partnership with Shelter Portland, the nonprofit will help unsheltered and housing-insecure community members access food, housing, behavioral health treatment, healthcare, and work opportunities. This organization will use the historic building at 247 SE 82nd Avenue over the next few years until the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon demolishes it to make room for affordable housing. The organization intends to support the housed neighbors along with the unhoused community by providing regular cleanups in Montavilla’s public spaces and instituting a three-block safety zone around the site.

PDX Saints Love’s founder, Kristle Delihanty, expects the site to be active most weekdays, although outward-facing services occur only on certain days and times. The groups will leverage relationships with other nonprofits to provide hygiene, health, housing, and work training. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, Cultivate Initiatives will bring mobile washing stations offering showers and haircuts to those who do not have regular access to those necessities. Several times a week, an onsite Peer Wellness Specialist will provide guidance in navigating housing placement or coordinate long-term shelter referrals. In a partnership with Trillium Community Health and Care Oregon, Community Health Workers will provide connections to primary care, OHP assistance, and coordinated care for all health-related needs. Worksystems will offer workforce development and internship opportunities, including a shelter worker training program where people can automatically build a resume hour-by-hour. “We’ll be partnering with Worksystems, which is using the shelter to pay day laborers to clean up in the neighborhood, [making] sure that our neighbors feel supported,” said Delihanty.

Kristle Delihanty and Keith Wilson cutting ceremonial ribbon

Recognizing that a concentration of service providers already impacts Montavilla, Kristle Delihanty explained that PDX Saints Love’s support of the unsheltered and housing insecure will also include support for the entire neighborhood and does not want to impose on the community further. In late February, the nonprofit hosted a meeting with neighborhood and business leaders, including those living in homes around the former Saints Peter & Paul property. At the meeting, they listened to people’s concerns and used that feedback to adopt policies Delihanty hopes will minimize the impact on surrounding properties. In addition to the regular cleaning and beautification work coordinated from the site, they will implement rules to discourage camping by the SE 82nd Avenue building. “If someone is camped right outside on Pine or Ash [street] and they came in to get services, we would have a conversation with them. We would let them know about the Community agreement with our neighbors and that we need them to abide by it. If they continue after a seven-day period to stay and camp, then we would withhold services,” explained Delihanty. “We want to give them a grace period to figure something out first, but if they refuse to work with us, we would just withhold services. The same thing goes for the purchase or sale of illegal substances within a three-block radius and open use of illegal substances within a three-block radius.” The day service provider will also maintain a monitored email address so people can contact them with concerns or operational feedback so they can address those issues.

Mobile shower truck

Like many people who work in the recovery and homeless services industry, Delihanty started this work after breaking out of her own cycle of drug use. “I come from homelessness and a 20-year heroin addiction in East Portland. My last nine felony arrests were on 82nd and Powell. When I went into recovery, I got a chance from the District Attorney to start over, and one of the ways that I learned to keep focused on my recovery was through service work,” explained Delihanty. Her experience in recovery and knowledge of the homeless community guided her early work. In 2017, the group started with a giant pot of chili to feed people at Lents Park while discussing options and experiences. PDX Saints Love grew into a 20-volunteer operation by 2018 and became a 501c3 organization in 2021. The organization has operated a reoccurring Wellness Fair in the Lents neighborhood that has grown to 160 participants. The fair will continue in Lents on Mondays. The new site on SE 82nd Avenue will work as a staging and meal prep area for those events. The new building will help the organization improve its existing programs, bringing its formerly outside work into a warm building that can serve people year-round. However, a few new offerings are possible thanks to the added space.

Shelter Portland’s Founder & Chair President Keith Wilson giving interview

PDX Saints Love’s partnership with Shelter Portland and the District Attorney’s office will offer day-service guests a Homeless Court program that works to remove barriers to housing and employment caused by criminal backgrounds and active warrants. Similar to the help Delihanty received from the District Attorney while building her current life, the program intends to extend that same chance to others looking to secure a stable life after completing a four-month process. Knowing that there is a future away from drugs and living on the street is an integral part of treating people’s substance use disorder and getting people working on a future.

Portland Rescue Mission van

PDX Saints Love has a 24-month lease for the 247 SE 82nd Avenue facility with an option to extend occupancy until the owners schedule demolition. They will begin operations by offering essential services, including hot meals, showers, wound care, overdose prevention, clothing, and other weather supplies to day-services guests. The established neighborhood group Montavilla Collective will continue to use the building for its events on Wednesdays. Services offered at this location will grow to include more health care services, assistance clearing criminal records, and housing placement. PDX Saints Love staff will meet regularly with neighbors as they grow, gathering input and identifying corrective actions required to remain a positive influence on the community. The people leading this effort are committed to ending homelessness while restoring the communities impacted by the epidemic.

Election Statement: Keith Wilson of Shelter Portland is running for Portland Mayor. Montavilla News does not endorse candidates for office or support ballot measures.


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