Aurora Commons

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Aurora Commons
Aurora Commons logo.png
Named afterAurora Avenue
Formation2011; 11 years ago (2011)
Location
  • 8914 Aurora Avenue North, Seattle
Coordinates47°41′38″N 122°20′39″W / 47.6939°N 122.3442°W / 47.6939; -122.3442Coordinates: 47°41′38″N 122°20′39″W / 47.6939°N 122.3442°W / 47.6939; -122.3442
Region
Licton Springs, North Seattle
ServicesHomeless drop-in center
AffiliationsChristian Reformed Church in North America
Websiteauroracommons.org

Aurora Commons is a drop-in center for homeless people in Seattle. It was co-founded in 2011 by Lisa Etter Carlson.[1][2] It has been described as "a small oasis in the heart of Seattle's forgotten desert", Aurora Avenue North – an area of the city where sex workers and homeless frequently find patrons, heroin and cheap motels; and which had no supermarket, bank, community center, nor bookstore, and no Seattle City Council representation until 2015.[3][4] The space is affiliated with the Christian Reformed Church across the street.[5] Local businesses have protested the center's needle exchange program.[6] Aurora Commons also provides condoms and other services for sex workers.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Vianna Davila and Vernal Coleman (February 5, 2019). "Homeless shelter expands in Seattle as freeze settles in". The Seattle Times.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  2. ^ Kate Walters (November 8, 2018). "'It really feels like a tipping point.' North Seattle on edge after shooting of homeless man". Seattle: KUOW.
  3. ^ Tess Riski (March 23, 2017). "On Aurora Avenue: 'Radical hospitality'". Crosscut.com.
  4. ^ "Seattle's Aurora stretch is frozen in time, but voters are turning up the heat on change". The Seattle Times. January 8, 2018.
  5. ^ Chris Meehan (December 13, 2017). "Awakening to the Needs in Seattle". official website. Christian Reformed Church in North America.
  6. ^ Steve Kiggins (July 23, 2013). "Needle exchange gets prickly in Greenwood". Tacoma: KCPQ.
  7. ^ Sophia Stephens (June 12, 2018). "In the Wake of FOSTA and SESTA, Local Organization SNAPS Is Ramping Up Its Efforts to Help Seattle Sex Workers". The Stranger. Seattle.

External links[]


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