Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Homeless In Seattle Get Help From City Waste Pumper

As RV Wastewater Pilot Program coordinator for Seattle Public Utilities, Chris Wilkerson visits people living in motor homes and trailers and offers to pump out their waste for free.
Erin Slomski-Pritz
/
NPR
As RV Wastewater Pilot Program coordinator for Seattle Public Utilities, Chris Wilkerson visits people living in motor homes and trailers and offers to pump out their waste for free.

Chris Wilkerson used to get phone calls in the middle of the night about poop.

Wilkerson, who was part of Seattle Public Utilities' Spill Response Team, says the calls were usually from the public. Typically, he says, the caller would tell him, "Hey, there's a puddle of poo" in the street. And many times, the excrement would be coming from a recreational vehicle.

Starting around 2010, there has been a significant increase in spills coming from RVs and other vehicles in Seattle. It was happening as the number of people living out of their vehicles was on the rise. By one count, 891 people lived out of their vehicles in Seattle and the surrounding area in 2010. Now that number is close to 3,000.

"We saw more people decline into homelessness quicker," says Bill Kirlin-Hackett, who directs the Scofflaw Mitigation Team, a city-funded program that helps people living in RVs avoid losing their vehicles for violating city ordinances. "And if you own a vehicle, the quick response is to live in it, so a lot of people new to homelessness were entering vehicles."

Wilkerson's team realized that many of the waste spills were unintentional. Many of the RVs were dilapidated and not fit for habitation, and there was no public dump site in the city of Seattle.

With the help of a contractor, Chris Wilkerson makes monthly visits to RVs and motor homes around the city that don't have access to dumping stations.
Erin Slomski-Pritz / NPR
/
NPR
With the help of a contractor, Chris Wilkerson makes monthly visits to RVs and motor homes around the city that don't have access to dumping stations.

Wilkerson says his team initially proposed the construction of a new dump station geared toward RV dwellers. But in January, Seattle Public Utilities piloted what Wilkerson says has turned out to bea more effective response: a mobile service that goes directly to the source of the problem. Wilkerson is now coordinator of the RV Wastewater Pilot Program.

He visits people living in RVs, trucks and automobiles, across the city and offers to pump out their waste for free.

A group of volunteers from a local charity goes ahead with food and medical supplies and ask the RV occupants if they need their tanks emptied. Volunteer Mary Jo Shannon is board president of the charity, St. Vincent de Paul. "These people are wonderful," says Shannon of the people living in vehicles. "And they're human beings that deserve the respect and dignity that all of us do."

RV dweller John Hendrix has been using Wilkerson's service for about four months.

When Wilkerson visited him last, he asked whether Hendrix had dumped his waste anywhere since the previous monthly pumping.

"Nope," Hendrix answered. "You know you're my favorite people. You know I can't leave you guys hanging."

Hendrix concedes though that the monthly visits aren't enough. After about three weeks, he says, he uses the bathroom in a nearby medical clinic or sometimes goes in the park.

The waste-pumping program is carried out in coordination with volunteers from the local charity, St. Vincent de Paul, who bring along food and medical supplies.
Erin Slomski-Pritz / NPR
/
NPR
The waste-pumping program is carried out in coordination with volunteers from the local charity, St. Vincent de Paul, who bring along food and medical supplies.

Last year, before the waste removal program was created, there were more than a 100 illegal spills from RVs, according to Wilkerson. He says that number has fallen by 75 percent so far this year. And the people in the RVs are grateful.

"It helps out immensely, that's for sure," said Sean Eagle, who recently began living out of one. "Or else, I wouldn't know what to do."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.