Street Services Coordination Center
Source: PDF pp. 121-122 ↗ · raw: 121 · 122
Breadcrumb: Service Area Summaries > City Administrator > City Administrator. > Street Services Coordination Center
City of Portland Fiscal Year 2026-27 Proposed Budget City Administrator > City Administrator > Street Services Coordination Center Street Services Coordination Center Budget Revenues by Fund 2023-24 Actuals 2024-25 Actuals 2025-26 Revised Budget 2026-27 Proposed External Revenues $0 $420 $0 $0 General Fund $0 $420 $0 $0 Internal Revenues $0 $1,626,276 $4,510,685 $2,843,316 General Fund $0 $1,626,276 $4,510,685 $2,843,316 Grand Total $0 $1,626,696 $4,510,685 $2,843,316 Program Expenses by Major Object Program expenses only include personnel, internal materials and services, external materials and services, and capital. 2023-24 Actuals 2024-25 Actuals 2025-26 Revised Budget 2026-27 Proposed External Materials and $0 $262,383 $1,378,065 $527,888 Services Internal Materials and $0 $108,675 $277,838 $240,449 Services Personnel $0 $772,614 $1,854,782 $2,074,979 Grand Total $0 $1,143,672 $3,510,685 $2,843,316 Program Description and Goals The Street Services Coordination Center (SSCC) was created under an emergency declaration issued by former Mayor Ted Wheeler on March 2, 2022. Operating under an incident command structure, the SSCC works to connect individuals experiencing homelessness to services and shelter options. As part of Portland Solutions, the SSCC partners with the Public Environment Management Office, the Impact Reduction Program (IRP) and City Shelter Services to synchronize the City's homelessness response efforts and provide improved resolution to community concerns. Services 121
City of Portland Fiscal Year 2026-27 Proposed Budget The work of SSCC is wide ranging. It includes connecting individuals experiencing homelessness to services and shelter options, supporting IRP's homeless camp removal operations, and helping to address high-impact camps by bringing together other local property-owning jurisdictions, private property owners, Portland Police, and PBOT to provide comprehensive solutions and address lived-in vehicles. Equity Impacts The SSCC ensures broad access to services and connection to opportunities across the metro area for individuals experiencing homelessness. The SSCC's City Outreach team engages with chronically homeless individuals living outside and in shelter—a population that is disproportionately BIPOC and with one or more disabling conditions. Changes to Program SSCC's budget is built around $2.8M in one-time General Fund resources to fund 11 LTE outreach workers, resources for the Ticket Home Program and transportation services to shelter. This package does not fund the $1M cash transfer to Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) to help cover the cost of the derelict RV disposal fees, that had been included in previous fiscal years. 122
Parent: City Administrator. · PDF: pp. 121-122 ↗