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Human waste bill?

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Jim

RVF Supporter
Joined
Dec 18, 2019
Messages
3,866
Location
North Carolina
RV Year
2016
RV Make
Newmar
RV Model
London Aire 4551
RV Length
45
Chassis
Freightliner
Engine
Cummins / I6 Diesel Pusher 600HP / 1,950 ft-lbs
TOW/TOAD
2016 Jeep Rubicon
Fulltimer
No
It will be interesting how they write this bill; whether or not it exempts RVs in established campgrounds with sewer hookups or dump stations. I will be watching this closely since we live part of the year in Washington state.

Having recently driven through the Seattle area, I can understand the need for something like this. There are decrepit old RVs parked everywhere with the homeless living in them. And, in fact, there's something called "RV ranching" going on where someone buys a bunch of old RVs and rents them out to the homeless. Obviously, there are no sewer hook-ups/dump stations where these RVs are parked along the streets and many of them are barely capable of being moved, much less making frequent trips to an approved dump station. Thus, human waste is just dumped in the street. Nasty situation.

What makes this even harder to deal with is a recent outr decision that you have to let the homeless camp on public property (streets and roads, parks, city/county/state property, etc.) if you can't provide every homeless person with approved housing...at no cost to them, of course. The result is that Seattle has become a magnet for the homeless and there are huge encampments everywhere. Sadly, most of these folks are in need of mental health care and/or drug/alcohol treatment which is very limited.

More than you wanted to know, I'm sure. Something needs to be done to protect public health, however.

TJ
 
It will be interesting how they write this bill

TJ
Yes it will. And how they enforce it as well.

If I understand what Sen. Tim Sheldon wants, then I assume his law will force people to move their RV if it's not in compliance. And in a lot of cases, that means the people living in the RV will be forced back on the street, and the problematic poop problem will persist.

Faced with eviction, Urban Camper will surely take defensive measures. As the tension grows between the urban squatters and the poop posse, rebellious city managers will declare their cities RV Sanctuaries. Things will spiral downward from there.

Yep, I see big problems on the horizon.
 
Yes it will. And how they enforce it as well.

If I understand what Sen. Tim Sheldon wants, then I assume his law will force people to move their RV if it's not in compliance. And in a lot of cases, that means the people living in the RV will be forced back on the street, and the problematic poop problem will persist.

Faced with eviction, Urban Camper will surely take defensive measures. As the tension grows between the urban squatters and the poop posse, rebellious city managers will declare their cities RV Sanctuaries. Things will spiral downward from there.

Yep, I see big problems on the horizon.
I pretty much concur, Jim. There are two competing problems; public sanitation and the needs of the homeless. Both are serious issues that the bureaucracy really doesn't want to deal with in other than a cosmetic way. It always amazes me at the lengths to which people will go to avoid dealing directly with a serious issue.

TJ
 
Just thinking off the cuff here but seems to me that the city could just buy a couple of honey wagons, let me roam the city and allow the RVs to dump for a nominal fee, which could be charged to the registered owner of the vehcile. Not registered? Tow it. No pickup with 60 days? Crush it or seize it. If someone dumps in the street, write a stiff ticket to the registered owner. Does it fix the homeless problem? No. Seems better than the current reality though.
 
Like so many things there are already laws on the books about dumping human waste on the ground. It is just a money grab, one more permit, one more tax dollar they don't have to claim as increasing taxes, although it is.
 
Another way to address the sewage issue might just be for the city to buy some PVC pipe and build some above-ground sewage connections. Run a line of PVC down the curb, that empties into to a modified manhole cover located near the sidewalk. put a 3” connection every 24’, let the homeless RVs dump into it. It doesn’t solve the homeless problem. It’s fair to say it might even encourage it. The aim isn’t to solve homelessness. It’s to get raw sewage out of the street.
 
Another way to address the sewage issue might just be for the city to buy some PVC pipe and build some above-ground sewage connections. Run a line of PVC down the curb, that empties into to a modified manhole cover located near the sidewalk. put a 3” connection every 24’, let the homeless RVs dump into it. It doesn’t solve the homeless problem. It’s fair to say it might even encourage it. The aim isn’t to solve homelessness. It’s to get raw sewage out of the street.
Sadly, this approach assumes that the homeless will want to properly dump their sewage. Unfortunately, many (if not most) are dealing with mental illness, substance abuse, etc. and aren't willing or able to follow rules and procedures. Seattle's homeless problems will continue until the root issues are effectively addressed.

TJ
 
Sadly, this approach assumes that the homeless will want to properly dump their sewage. Unfortunately, many (if not most) are dealing with mental illness, substance abuse, etc. and aren't willing or able to follow rules and procedures. Seattle's homeless problems will continue until the root issues are effectively addressed.

TJ
That’s fair. It’s a huge problem for sure.
 
Those people are always looking to extract more money from our pockets, and stuffing their own. Where does it end? ?
 

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