Homelessness in Central Oregon is a housing issue, a public safety issue, and a community issue. In September 2024, the City of Bend and Deschutes County took a unanimous, concrete step to address it. Both governing bodies approved a strategy centered on a 170-acre area at Juniper Ridge, east of Highway 97, designated as a “Temporary Safe Stay Area.” The decision followed months of planning and was accelerated by the Mile Marker 132 Fire in August 2024, a 78-acre blaze caused by a cooking fire that underscored the risks of unmanaged encampments.
What Happened at Mile Marker 132
In August 2024, a cooking fire at an encampment near mile marker 132 on Highway 97 ignited a 78-acre wildfire. The fire required significant emergency response resources and threatened nearby properties. It was a stark illustration of a problem that Central Oregon communities have grappled with for years: unmanaged camping in wildfire-prone areas creates real danger for everyone, including the people living in those camps.
The fire didn’t create the homelessness crisis, but it crystallized the urgency. City and county leaders who had been debating various approaches found common ground: the status quo was unacceptable, and a managed site was necessary.
The Juniper Ridge Strategy
The approved plan designates 170 acres at Juniper Ridge as a Temporary Safe Stay Area. The site is divided between County jurisdiction (approximately 50 acres) and City jurisdiction (approximately 120 acres), east of Highway 97. The strategy includes:
- Managed camping with designated sites rather than uncontrolled encampments
- Hygiene facilities including restrooms, showers, and laundry
- Case management services to help residents transition to permanent housing
- Security with on-site management and enforcement of behavioral expectations
- Full closure of other unauthorized camping areas by May 31, 2025
The last point is critical and politically significant. The strategy is not just about opening a new site; it’s about consolidating scattered encampments into a single managed location where services can be delivered efficiently and public lands can be restored.
The Housing Connection
Every serious analysis of homelessness reaches the same conclusion: the root cause is a lack of affordable housing. People experiencing homelessness in Central Oregon aren’t predominantly drifters or transients. Most are people who lived and worked here but lost housing due to rising costs, medical emergencies, job loss, or family breakdown. The path back to stability runs through housing.
The Juniper Ridge site is explicitly temporary. It’s not meant to become a permanent settlement. The goal is to provide a stable, safe base from which people can work with case managers to find permanent housing. That means the strategy’s success depends entirely on the availability of affordable permanent housing to move people into.
This is where the connection to Bend’s broader housing policy becomes clear. Every affordable unit built through the city’s housing programs, every ADU rented to a worker at a reasonable rate, every middle housing development that adds supply at accessible price points, these all create the off-ramps that make the temporary site actually temporary rather than permanent by default.
Community Reactions
The Juniper Ridge strategy has generated strong opinions across the spectrum. Some residents worry about concentrating homeless services in one area. Others argue that dispersed camping was worse for both the homeless population and the community at large. Business owners near the Highway 97 corridor have concerns about impacts on commercial activity.
The honest assessment: there are no easy answers here. Every approach involves trade-offs. The Juniper Ridge strategy represents a judgment call that managed concentration with services is preferable to unmanaged dispersion without services. Whether that judgment proves correct will depend on execution, funding, and the pace of permanent housing development.
What This Means for the Housing Market
The Juniper Ridge strategy doesn’t directly affect home prices or the market for buyers and sellers. But it’s connected to the housing market in ways that matter.
First, the success of the strategy depends on affordable housing supply. Every affordable unit that gets built, whether through the city’s housing programs, private development, or new projects like Caraway, creates capacity to move people from temporary shelter to permanent housing.
Second, how Bend handles homelessness affects the city’s livability and reputation, which in turn affect property values and demand. A city that addresses homelessness thoughtfully and effectively is more attractive to both residents and prospective buyers than one that either ignores the problem or responds with approaches that don’t work.
Third, the wildfire risk dimension is real. Unmanaged encampments in fire-prone areas create risk that affects insurance rates, property values, and the safety of entire neighborhoods. A managed approach that reduces wildfire risk from encampments benefits the broader community, including property owners.
What to Watch
The implementation timeline is tight. The May 31, 2025 deadline for closure of unauthorized camping areas will be a significant test. Key questions to monitor:
- Does the Juniper Ridge site attract adequate funding for services?
- Are case management resources sufficient to move residents toward permanent housing?
- Does the city follow through on enforcement at other camping locations?
- Can permanent housing development keep pace with the need for transition housing?
The Transition Timeline
The strategy includes a phased closure of other unauthorized camping areas, with a final deadline of May 31, 2025. This timeline is tight and will test the city and county’s coordination capacity. The practical challenges of transitioning hundreds of people from dispersed locations to a single managed site are significant, including transportation, personal property, service continuity, and the willingness of individuals to relocate.
The enforcement component, closing other camping areas after the Juniper Ridge site is operational, will also be closely watched. Previous attempts to close camping areas without providing alternatives were largely unsuccessful and legally challenged. By providing a managed alternative first, the strategy aims to withstand both practical and legal scrutiny. Whether the execution matches the strategy’s design will determine its success.
We’ll continue covering how housing policy and community issues intersect in our housing market section. These aren’t easy topics, but they’re central to understanding the full picture of Central Oregon’s housing landscape. If you have questions about how these dynamics affect your real estate decisions, our team is here for an honest conversation.