What about the public health concerns about trash building up in camps?

Trash in encampments is a serious concern, especially in a flood plain such as the area around the Reserve Street bridge. Neither the City nor the County is in the business of hauling or landfilling municipal trash; the area is served by private companies. The Missoula City-County Health Department has a role in investigating complaints about unmanaged garbage and trash, but it’s clear that issuing tickets or fines to indigent people would be ineffective. The outreach workers who regularly visit people living near the bridge hold cleanup days and remove trash in cooperation with the area’s private garbage hauler as well as the people staying in the camps.

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1. Why has Reaching Home: Missoula’s 10-Year Plan to End Homelessness not ended homelessness?
2. Why is local government allowing people to live outdoors, some in “encampments”?
3. Why don’t the police arrest people for panhandling?
4. Why don’t police arrest people who are drunk in public, for instance on the Courthouse lawn?
5. Most homeless people are from other places. Why do we take care of them?
6. What about the public health concerns about trash building up in camps?
7. Why doesn’t the City make the Reserve Street bridge riverfront area into a park?
8. Is Missoula in line to become the next Portland, Seattle or San Francisco in number of people experiencing homelessness?