HASSO HERING

A perspective from Oregon’s mid-Willamette Valley

Portable toilets: Council renews the debate

Written July 27th, 2022 by Hasso Hering

On Tuesday evening, a man sleeps near a storage unit and the portable toilet outside the First Christian Church on Washington Street.

The portable toilet outside First Christian Church in Albany was the focus once again as the city council engaged in another round of talk about it on Wednesday.

At issue was a proposed ordinance to permit the placement of portable toilets on private property under certain circumstances. Councilwoman Matilda Novak voted against the second reading of the measure’s title at the same meeting as the first. As provided by the city charter, this postponed the second reading until the next meeting.

To Novak, setting up a permit procedure for portable toilets and then having to enforce it is more trouble and may cause more expense than necessary.

To other council members and the city staff, the orinance is needed because without it, portable toilets are prohibited in Albany except at construction sites and special events.

Despite that apparent ban decreed by the municipal code, in March the council voted 5-1, with Marilyn Smith opposed, to allow First Christian to keep its porta-potty for another year. It also asked the staff to draft code language to allow this.

The proposed new law would continue to prohibit portables as an alterative to hooking up to the sewer service. It would make an exception for city parks, even though most parks could have and some do have standard restrooms.

As for other situations, the proposal would require permits good for 90 days to be issued by the city manager. Applications would have to be accompanied by a “site plan,” but Public Works Director Chris Bailey said a simple pencil drawing would suffice. Permits could be renewed for additional 90-day periods, but the permit fee — Bailey estimated about $30 — would be demanded only once.

With city permits, portables would have to be screened and would have to be situated to prevent people from looking in when the doors open.

Assuming the measure passes in August, this raises new questions about the portable at First Christian.

Would the council’s blanket one-year permit be superseded by the new restrictions? For instance, would the church have to apply for a new permit, and would it have to build a screen? Could that be done without intruding on the setback from the public right-of-way, which the ordinance also requires?

One side in this continuing saga is concerned that without explicit permit requirements in the code there could be an explosion of porta-potties all over town, something that no one wants.

The other side — Matilda Novak mostly —  just wants to let First Christian continue to do what it has done: provide a crucial human service to homeless people, especially those who partake of the church’s free meals on Thursday nights.

The council meets again on Aug. 8 and Aug. 10. We’ll see what happens with portable toilets then. (hh)





8 responses to “Portable toilets: Council renews the debate”

  1. Gordon L. Shadle says:

    If porta potties are allowed by the ordinance, then the city should also mandate that the loo owner install running water (hot & cold) with a shower so the houseless can wash up properly after doing their business.

    I suspect the number of porta potty permits will go down to near zero after a few are blown up or vandalized beyond repair.

  2. James Engel says:

    Hey, it beats “Shank’in Here Boss” (Cool Hand Luke movie). ‘Cause when the holding tank needs to release it’s gonna happen. Albany had a public toilet next to city Hall at 2nd & Broadalbin for years with no problems. All police shifts had to check on the location 24/7!! Europe seems to have no problem with public toilets.

  3. Al Nyman says:

    Did I get that right that the porta potties have to be screen or situated so you can’t look in them when the door is open? So are they then going to build permanent structures around the porta potty’s at Bryant Park or maybe they can lay them flat on the ground and you could tunnel into them. I thought congress is stupid but maybe Albany beats them.

  4. Birdieken says:

    The Church should also be held responsible for the crimes that occur as a direct result of their placing a portable toilet as that location. This is especially important when used after hours on a business property in a residential neighborhood. The portable toilet should be on city property because the city has the resources for these types of unique problems. If the church wants to help during the day, they just have to open their doors.

    • Ray Kopczynski says:

      “The Church should also be held responsible for the crimes that occur as a direct result of their placing a portable toilet as that location.”

      In the long time it has been in place at the church, has there been a single instance of what you describe?

    • centrist says:

      B
      Ray K is on point.
      Holding the Church liable for something that hasn’t happened as well as for acts not committed doesn’t pass muster.
      Providing the portapot allows folks to answer the call when it comes, while keeping a level of security for the Church.

  5. Julie V says:

    Screens? That’s ridiculous and just another obstacle.

 

 
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