As homeless camps take root near downtown Anchorage, neighbors say years of progress have been erased in days

May 12—Every morning lately, between 7 and 8 a.m., Rob Cupples walks the wide-open lot across the street from his Anchorage business and counts the homeless camps.

On Tuesday there were more than 40, including a few tents that weren't there the day before.

"Every day that goes by, it gets just a little bit more chaotic," said Cupples, walking between scattered trash and scrubby alders. "It's sort of incremental, very small increments. But I can feel it. I can feel every day the chaos slowly starting to build."

Cupples owns rental properties on a block of East Third Avenue just east of downtown, across the street from where the old Alaska Native Medical Center used to be. Now owned by the Municipality of Anchorage, it's a big, flat, undeveloped lot. And since the demobilization of the shelter inside Sullivan Arena on May 1, it has become one of the de facto landing pads for people with nowhere else to go.

This section of downtown, close to social services such as Bean's Cafe and the Brother Francis Shelter, has long drawn homeless campers. For decades, residents and community groups pleaded with the city to enact policies that would prevent crime, chaos and misery from growing unchecked in the neighborhood. And for most of the last three years, there was a reprieve: After the city opened the mass care shelter inside the Sullivan as a pandemic emergency measure, this stretch of Third Avenue grew calmer and quieter.

But in the days since the arena was closed to all but the 90 most severely disabled clients, things have returned to the way they were. And Cupples says he simply has to come to terms with the fact that homeless campers will be living there until city officials enact real solutions.

"My reality is that they're here, and if the city isn't going to come and maintain order, then I have to do everything that I can do to maintain as much order as possible for the sake of my business," he said.

'You don't win with confrontation'

Though Cupples doesn't live in the neighborhood anymore, he has deep roots there. In 1951, when his grandparents built a house there, the area was rural enough that his grandmother used to chase dairy cows out of her garden with a broom. Now it's one of the houses he uses for short-term rentals.

His three units on Third Avenue are booked through the summer, and already he's fielding client concerns about the encampments across the street. Public customer reviews online, which new clients use when they book their stays in Anchorage, are beginning to note the camps, which Cupples thinks will affect future reservations.