Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­city council pushes for tiny house villages for homeless people

Council passes series of proposed measures to address homelessness
strathhomeless
Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­city council directed city staff Monday to examine the feasibility of a series of measures to address homelessness. Photo Mike Howell
Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­city council directed city staff Monday to examine a series of proposed measures to address homelessness, including creating tiny house villages and providing space for low-income people living in

The push from council was in addition to three options Mayor Kennedy Stewart outlined last week to have staff consider the feasibility of a temporary sanctioned homeless camp, leasing or purchasing hotels and converting city-owned buildings into emergency housing or shelter space.

A “disaster relief shelter” network, as proposed by councillors Rebecca Bligh and Michael Wiebe, that works as an emergency triage centre for homeless people was also incorporated into council’s requests of staff to study.

“It’s time for this council to step up and really showcase that we do need to find these supports,” Wiebe said in his closing remarks. “We are in a dire situation that has our neighbours and friends in really difficult situations.”

The move by council comes as the continues to grow while residents in Strathcona and across the city, particularly in Yaletown, urge politicians and police to respond to an uptick in drug use, crime and street disorder.

In putting forward the proposed actions, councillors emphasized that whatever temporary measures city staff recommend that they do not let the provincial or federal government off the hook to fund permanent housing.

“It’s become abundantly clear that the status quo isn’t really an option, and so we need to come up with innovative measures to enable people to have a safe place to sleep, to bring their belongings, to connect them to social services but as well to restore our public parks for broad public use,” said Coun. Lisa Dominato, who has called for the creation of an emergency task force on mental health and addiction that involves municipal, provincial and federal governments and looks at how those issues intersect with housing.

None of council’s measures requested the city seek a court injunction to clear the Strathcona Park encampment, which would have to be done in cooperation with the park board, which is on record of not wanting to take such action.

Council’s decision came after hearing from 23 people last Friday who lined up on the telephone and some in the council chamber to weigh in on the mayor’s motion and wider issue of homelessness.

Residents from Strathcona and Yaletown, along with homeless people residing in Strathcona Park whose repeated mantra was “permanent housing saves lives,” spent four hours outlining their concerns.

Jason Trudeau, who lives in a tent with his wife in Strathcona Park, fought through tears to tell his story of homelessness to council. A commercial fisherman, Trudeau, his wife and three children left Winnipeg to begin a new life in Vancouver.

The family stayed in a hotel for a few months but Trudeau was unable to find work or permanent housing. He ran out of money, ended up on the street and his children were put into government care.

He and his wife stayed in the tent city that popped up earlier his year in a parking lot near CRAB park before moving to Strathcona Park. He described the Strathcona camp as “not a pretty place to be” and that it breeds violence.

“I’m a desperate father…I don’t want to be in tent cities, anymore,” he said, concluding the options outlined in the mayor’s motion couldn’t help him because his children wouldn’t be allowed in a shelter or sanctioned camp.

“I’m a normal person, I work hard for my money, I’m desperate. Where’s my help? What am I supposed to do? Forget about my kids?”

Claudette Abraham, a 45-year-old Indigenous woman also living in Strathcona Park, said she had a room in a single-room-occupancy hotel but was evicted for being unable to pay rent after the pandemic hit.

Somewhere along the way, she ended up in hospital with vision problems. When discharged, she set up a tent at the encampment in Strathcona Park. Abraham, who said she’s had “a rough life,” came to Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­in 2015 from Winnipeg to flee violence.

“I’m looking forward to working with the councillors toward adequate housing,” she said.

“My experience in [single-room-occupancy hotels] hasn’t been pleasant. There’s been times when my life has been threatened.”

In recent months, Katie Lewis, vice-president of the Strathcona Residents’ Association, has spoken frequently to media, to council and park board commissioners about the impact the growing tent city at Strathcona Park has had on the community.

Lewis told council Friday that she supported the mayor’s move to have city staff examine options to address homelessness. She empathized with council, however, saying that providing homes for people was not the mandate of city government, but of senior governments.

“We know that in the last 12 weeks that our day-to-day life [in Strathcona] has changed dramatically,” she said, noting it’s not just about seeing more garbage on the streets.

“We’re finding firearms in our parks. There’s a drug turf war going on. Our kids are not safe.”

She said the encampment at Strathcona Park has grown from 30 tents to more than 400 over 12 weeks. She suggested it was the biggest tent city in Canada and that it was “out of control.”

“Winter is coming, COVID cases are rising, we cannot continue the way we are,” she said, noting she visits the tent city regularly and speaks to campers. “The campers aren’t safe, residents aren’t safe and kids aren’t safe.”

Howard Chow, one of the city’s three deputy police chiefs, told council that encampments typically generate more police calls to the tent city itself and surrounding neighbourhood, as police are experiencing with the Strathcona homeless camp.

“We’ve seen about a 50 per cent increase in weapons calls around Strathcona, about a 68 per cent increase in break-and-enters, threatening street disorder,” Chow said.

“These are concerns that we are talking to residents all the time about and getting the feedback about their sense of fear and security and street disorder that they’re seeing on a fairly consistent basis.”

Many of those some concerns have been raised by residents in Yaletown in recent months, where people have complained about an uptick in drug use, crime, garbage, and vandalism.

Some have pointed to tenants residing in the former Howard Johnson hotel on Granville Street as the source of the disorder. The B.C. government recently purchased the hotel to house people from the Oppenheimer Park tent city, which was cleared in April under an emergency order.

B.C. Housing, in conjunction with the city and Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Coastal Health, also opened up the Roundhouse community centre to homeless people at the beginning of the pandemic. Tenants moved out June 19.

The VPD announced July 3 that it was deploying more officers to Yaletown and other parts of downtown in response to residents’ concerns, saying it was continuing to liaise with B.C. Housing, the city and management companies operating new supportive housing in the area.

Yaletown parent Ema Lale, who rents a home and has elementary school-aged children, told council she’s considering moving out of Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­because she feels unsafe in her neighbourhood.

She has called police three times for overdoses behind her building. Drug users have been seen on patios in her complex and discarded needles are a common sight.

“We cannot let our kids play in our backyards,” she said, describing the situation as “really scary” for families.

“I’m only concerned about safety. I totally feel for the homeless people, and I really have strong compassion, but I have no compassion for destructive behaviour.”

She told council that allowing the Roundhouse community centre to be used again to house homeless people would be a mistake. Lale said parents rely on the centre for before and after school daycare.

The centre also serves seniors in the neighbourhood and provides programs for children, many of whom attend Elsie Roy elementary school near the Roundhouse.

A homeless count conducted over 24 hours in March were without a home, with 547 unsheltered. The mayor has suggested the homeless population has grown since then, largely due to the pandemic, with the city thinning out it shelters for physical distancing, no-guest polices at some single-room occupancy hotels and job loss.

Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­park board commissioners were expected to meet Monday night to discuss motions related to finding a “non-park site” for the Strathcona Park encampment and suspending daily removal of temporary shelters during the pandemic.

[email protected]

@Howellings