John Parke, left, who goes by Cowboy, and Tiffany Deen rush to pack up their tents and other belongings on the morning of April 19 to avoid getting another trespassing ticket from police. (Whitney Bryen/InvestigateWest)

John Parke, known as “Cowboy,” is always ready to pack up and move. He stacks his black and blue tent, foam sleeping pad, and flannel-lined sleeping bag on top of a wagon that he hauls away every day at 7 a.m. before police arrive and order him and the other unhoused people of “camp town” to leave.

Moving has become part of Parke’s morning routine. He had to move when officials in Clarkston, a small town in southeastern Washington on the Idaho border, closed the park where he was living in October. He moved days later when the city erected fences around another park where he was preparing his shelter for winter. And he moved again when the mayor declared 75 people at an encampment behind Walmart a “state of emergency.” 

Clarkston homeless

An ordinance passed by Clarkston's Mayor and city councilmembers in February designated Foster Park as the only place people who are homeless can sleep at night. The park is closed for maintenance from 8 a.m. to noon each day, so Parke and the other dozen or so regulars who camp there must move all of their belongings every morning before the sprinklers go off, or risk being ticketed by police. (Whitney Bryen/InvestigateWest)

Clarkston homeless

An ordinance passed by Clarkston's Mayor and city councilmembers in February designated Foster Park as the only place people who are homeless can sleep at night. The park is closed for maintenance from 8 a.m. to noon each day, so Parke and the other dozen or so regulars who camp there must move all of their belongings every morning before the sprinklers go off, or risk being ticketed by police. (Whitney Bryen/InvestigateWest)