January 7th, 2009
Barack Obama | Partying on our last dime12 comments
December 24th, 2008
Willamette Week | Man, we screwed up.15 comments
December 17th, 2008
Chris Sundstrom | Such a sweetheart deal.4 comments
December 10th, 2008
Oregon Rail Holiday Express | So much for holiday spirit.56 comments
December 3rd, 2008
TMT Development | Bully in a bar fight.7 comments
November 26th, 2008
Associated Creditors Exchange | Chasing a debt to the ends of the Earth.7 comments
November 19th, 2008
Butch Miller | Un-fare play.18 comments
November 12th, 2008
Rainbow Adult Living | Busted!34 comments
November 5th, 2008
Steve Blake and Ike Diogu | Two Blazers blow a layup.21 comments
October 29th, 2008
Oregon Public Utility Commission | A little transparency, please.2 comments
![]() |
[April 27th, 2005] Mike Narver is a Christian who thinks we have a duty to look after society's less fortunate. But what earns him Rogue status is his lack of patience with the homeless outreach ministry renting space on his property. On Valentine's Day, he walked into the storefront at 323 NW 6th Ave. and told his tenants, Our Peaceful Place, to get out by May 1.
Apparently, clients (and their shopping carts and dogs) had been gathering on the sidewalk waiting to get inside-annoying artists in nerby galleries.
Our Peaceful Place moved from Northwest 3rd Avenue last November. Even though the 8-year-old nonprofit only had a month-to-month lease, director Barb Lescher had hopes of staying for a long time. But she quickly realized trouble might arise with the Everett Station Lofts, a neighboring complex of galleries and apartments for working artists. Nonetheless, Lescher thought the ministry would actually keep the homeless off the streets, and away from budding business.
"They believe that our clients are the reason that they haven't been able to sell their art," says Lescher, who took over the nonprofit after its founder, Sister Maria Francis Waugh, died in a car accident two years ago. "But the people who complain benefit, because those very same people that they don't want in front of their doors are in here."
Narver's response, echoed by gallery owners: "We can't have groups of people just loitering outside."
Our Peaceful Place is more of a living room than a shelter or a social-service agency. Its basic offerings for about 100 people a day are a room with more than a dozen comfy couches, hot coffee, a telephone and a bathroom.
While a storage company has offered a temporary home for the couches, Lescher is seeking a new spot for the people who would like to use them.
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Mike Narver”
Narver no rogueAs a friend of an Everett Station Lofts gallery owner who recently moved out after nearly three bum-filled years, I must call B.S. on you naming Mike Narver your Rogue of the Wee...
wrongi live in the lofts, and the peacefuls who hung in the peaceful place were far from peaceful. come down here and hang out. ask yourself how long you would take the kind of things that go...
SO glad it's goneI live in the lofts, and Our peaceful place got completely out of control. EVERY single one of our doorways was soaked in urine and fecal matter once it opened back in Novembe...
Mike Narver is my heroMike Narver made my home feel safe again. This part of town has always been a bit rough, but we knew that getting in. Providing a placefor people down on their luck to n...










