Housing is Health

Central City Concern (CCC) responded to Portland’s crisis in housing and homelessness with the Housing is Health campaign, initiated by CCC’s executive director and health system CEOs. With a lead gift of $21.5 million by a pioneering collaboration of six local hospitals and health organizations—Adventist Health Portland, CareOregon, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Legacy Health, Oregon Health & Science University and Providence Health & Services–Oregon—the Housing is Health initiative will bring homes, health, and healing into the Portland community where they are needed most.

The Housing is Health initiative is an unprecedented push to build 379 new homes designed specifically for individuals and families who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless. These buildings are spread across three separate locations, one of which is anchored by a critically needed health care clinic. All locations will offer residents a variety of support services, including substance use disorder recovery support, mentoring, life skills training, and help re-entering the workforce.

Housing is Health enables health care systems to work together to address social determinants of health such as housing and employment. Central City Concern’s Recuperative Care Program (in the Blackburn Building) gives homeless people who are exiting hospital stays more time to get better in a safe environment. Employment specialists in the Housing is Heath collaborative help residents to enter/reenter the workforce.

All three Housing is Health buildings are under construction. Charlotte B. Rutherford Place (51 family-housing apartments) in North Portland and Hazel Heights (153 work-force apartments) in Southeast Portland will open summer 2018. The Blackburn Building (51 units of respite care housing, 124 units of transitional housing, as well as a primary care clinic and pharmacy) will open in 2019.