Latest Vancouver fire has left dozens more without affordable homes as calls grow for more stable housing - Action News
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British Columbia

Latest Vancouver fire has left dozens more without affordable homes as calls grow for more stable housing

Housing agencies and the City of Vancouver have been scrambling to rehouse close to 60 people following another fire in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside,as British Columbia struggles to address an acute lack of affordable and social housing.

Fire that displaced almost 60 people highlights precarious nature of housing in city, non-profit says

Dozens left homeless after Downtown Eastside fire

2 years ago
Duration 1:03
More than 60 people are homeless, with some having also lost all their belongings, after a fire damaged multiple buildings in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

Housing agencies and the City of Vancouver have been scrambling to rehouse close to 60 people following another fire in theDowntown Eastside,as British Columbia struggles to address an acute lack of affordable and social housing.

The full structure fire that crews attended around 3:30 a.m. Monday affectedthree buildings at Powell Street and Princess Avenue,including two affordable housing sites, fire officials told CBCNews.

One of the single room occupancy (SRO) hotelsis privately owned andthe other is a transitional housing site called the Princess Rooms, run by the non-profit RainCity Housing.

RainCity co-executive director Catharine Humesays her organization has worked out temporary plans for some of the 29 residents of Princess Rooms, finding space in its other shelters or in other SROs for the next two to three days.

But she says the fire highlights the precarious nature of housing for many people in the city.

"There's this huge gap between what's needed and what is available currently,"Hume toldCBC'sOn the Coastguest host Margaret Gallagher on Monday.

"What continues to be needed is reallyaggressive investment into affordable housing as well as supportive housing," she said, adding that a new model of housing offering enhanced health-care support also needs more funding.

Fire crews are pictured on scene of a fire at an apartment near Princess and Powell in Vancouver, British Columbia on Monday, August 22, 2022.
Fire crews at the scene of a fire that affected three buildings at the corner of Princess Avenue and Powell Street in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Vancouver Coun.Pete Fry agrees with Hume, saying most SROsare beyond their "useful lifespan."

"It's a real challenge," he toldOn the Coast. "They're constantly being sort of bandaged over to try to keep them viable."

Hume says people will have to waituntil the city can do a full inspection of the Princess Rooms building sometime next week to know if or when residents will be able to return.

Fire officialssaid the roof of the other building that caught fire hascollapsed and doubt the structure can be salvaged.

Meanwhile, those who escaped Monday's fire are counting the cost.

Jeffrey Allenson, wholives at 568 Powell St., said he heard a loud "boom" and felt the entire building shakebefore he fled the building with his wife.

"Your life is just gone," he said. "It's just gone."

Steven Sackysaid he grabbed whatever he could before running outside leaving his livelihood to go up in flames.

"I lost all my drums.I have like 65 drums," he said. "Djembes ... congas, because I teach drums. My business is actually my drums in there."

"We're happy everyone came out safe," Sacky added.

Firefighters monitor the scene of the fire at Powell Street and Princess Avenue on Monday morning. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Long-term solutions

Fry saysit's time for B.C. tochange its approach to long-term housing solutions, citing a shift in Ontario where the housing ministry is investing in municipalities, which are better equipped to address what's happening on the ground.

With the city having recentlydispersed encampments on East Hastings Street, he says tensions areboiling over on the Downtown Eastside and he's worried about people's safety living in tents on the sidewalk or in city parks.

"These aren't really tenable for the city in the long run or even right now," he said.

Fry says he's open to any solutions that will free up resources and offer stability for the unhoused, suggesting the construction of tiny homes.

B.C. Housing Minister and acting Attorney General Murray Rankin says he's on boardwith creative solutions like Fry's and says the City of Vancouver is already looking at land where it might be able to build those types of modular homes.

"We have to find housing for people who are in dire circumstances and living on the streets," Rankintold CBCNewsonMonday, a month after taking over the housing portfolio from David Ebywho recently promisedswift action on homelessnessif he becomes B.C.'s next premier.

"We've managed to get about 1,400 people housed in Vancouver and we've got 700 more supportive housing units on the way," he said. "But there is a realserious short-term problem."

He says 20 new shelter spaces were recently opened and another "50 or so" permanent spaces will be opening in SROsthis week.

Rankinsays B.C. invests $1.2 billion in housing and homelessness every year and the province is meeting regularly with city officials, regional health authorities, B.C. Housing and other provincial agencies to try to keep up.

While he says Ottawa has shown some"good will" recently,he'shoping for more federal helpas he believesall levels of government need to work together to address the issue.

"We're all rolling up our sleeves and working just as hard as we can," he said. "There's a lot of a good co-ordinating work going on right now and we're going to get this done."

With files from On the Coast, Eva Uguen Csenge and Isabelle Raghem