Adults in custody test positive for COVID-19
ll individuals in that unit were tested for COVID-19 yesterday. As of Dec. 23, an additional adult in custody tested positive, for a total of two adults in custody at Inverness.
ll individuals in that unit were tested for COVID-19 yesterday. As of Dec. 23, an additional adult in custody tested positive, for a total of two adults in custody at Inverness.
In 2019, 113 people died in Multnomah County without an address or a home of their own; the highest since reporting began
On Dec. 17, 2020, the Juvenile Services Division was notified that a youth in detention, and an employee in the detention facility, tested positive for COVID-19.
Territory’s introduction to the LPSCC was the latest step in the process set in motion at January’s What Works in Public Safety Conference.
The votes reached across the continuum of services and strategies that Multnomah County leverages to prevent and end homelessness.
On Dec. 16, 2020, that an individual in-custody tested positive for COVID-19. Following the notification, the Sheriff’s Office, in coordination with Corrections Health, immediately acted.
East Multnomah County is on track to gain more than 100 units of affordable housing, thanks to a new agreement between the County and Home Forward, the region’s public housing authority.
The Multnomah County Board took several critical steps on Thursday, Dec. 17 to assure as many clients and community members as possible receive direct assistance through CARES Act funding.
Multnomah County’s Board of Commissioners approved a transfer of the county’s section of NW Cornelius Pass Road to the ODOT. The transfer was completed on March 1, 2021.
On Thursday, Dec. 17, the Board of Commissioners unanimously passed a plan detailing how to invest the groundbreaking new resources made possible by Metro’s supportive housing services bond measure.
Extending the state of emergency also extends the County’s moratorium on evictions for nonpayment of rent.
Multnomah County’s Board approved the use of federal CARES Act funds to acquire two properties that will help it respond to the COVID-19 pandemic and provide long-term resources after the pandemic.