Fraser Valley residents call on province to help as trash piles up along Chilliwack River - Action News
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British Columbia

Fraser Valley residents call on province to help as trash piles up along Chilliwack River

Garbage is piling up in the Chilliwack River as more temporary and long termcampsites appear in the bushes. Residents are calling on the province to clean up the trash before it's washed downstream. They also want the province to do more to address the root cause an affordable housing crisis.

Residents say discarded batteries, luggage, clothing and needles pose environmental risk as river rises

Items scattered on the ground at an abandoned campsite near Sweltzer Creek in Chilliwack on Tuesday, November 5, 2019. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

The Chilliwack River used to be an escape for Sterling Haglund, a tranquil area in the mountains just outside the citywhere the angler and his collie, Jetta, fishfor chum salmon.

These days, the lifelong Fraser Valley resident has to step overdiscarded car batteries, luggage, furniture, and clothes on the shore before casting his line downstream.

InSweltzer Creek near the Vedder Bridge, garbage is piling up as more temporary and long termcampsites appear in the bushes. The trash is pollutingthepristine natural area, but Haglund says it's also a symptom of a larger issue of homelessness in the Fraser Valley community.

"It was never this bad, ever.It's out of control,"he said.

"We can clean up these homeless camps but they're just going to come back. We've got to help the homeless people find homes. It's a crisis for sure."

Haglund is one of several residents in Chilliwack, an hour's drive east of Vancouver, who are concerned about the rising rate of homeless encampments near SweltzerCreek and the impact of the garbage left by them.

They say the garbagethat could be swept downstream into the Fraser River is an environmental hazard that is not being taken seriously enough by the province. Advocates for the homeless say the issue comes down to affordable housing and without it, the problem will persist.

Sterling Haglund said the amount of garbage piling up along the Chilliwack River near Sweltzer Creek is the worst he's ever seen. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

'It's going to get a lot worse'

Chilliwack, a city of over 90,000 people,has been hit hard by the affordable housing crisis affecting much of B.C.,said Patti MacAhonic, executive director for the Ann Davis Transition Society, a shelter for women experiencing violence.

In 2017, there were more than 220 people experiencing homelessness in Chilliwack.

People are drawn to the Fraser Valley by itstemperateclimate and a perception of more affordable housing, MacAhonic said. In response, around120 supportive housing units have been built in recent years, she said.

But the cost of living remains high and for people struggling with trauma and mental health issues, MacAhonic said affordable permanent housing can be even harder to find,forcing some to live in makeshift camps like the onenear Sweltzer Creek.

"Unless something drastic is done, there's a lot of dollars frankly poured into affordable housing quickly, it's going to get a lot worse before it gets better," MacAhonic said.

Orion Engar, director of the Chilliwack River Valley Electoral Area E, said it shouldn't be solely up to volunteers to keep the creek clean. He says the province needs to do more before the water level rises and carries the trash downstream. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

In 2017, a helicopter from thefrom the Ministry of Forests Lands and Natural Resources Operationswas usedto remove thousands of pounds of garbage from the riverbank. Volunteers have been removing garbage from the area since, but the high volumes areproving unmanageable.

Orion Engar,regional director for the Fraser Valley Regional District, wants theprovince to step in. Engar said items like needles and drugs have been found among the garbage, making removaldangerous work for volunteers.

Residents are also concerned about the pollution being carried downstream. The river can rise up to two metresin the winter, and carries garbage into the Fraser River and out to the ocean, Engar said.

"We really need the province to step up and provide more oversight," he said.

"Struggling people ... need full time attention and the province needs to stepup and create the solution."

Need help from province

The province will clean up the riverbank once the encampments are vacated and the water recedes to a level that allows for the safe removal of garbage,a spokesperson for theMinistry of Municipal Affairs and Housing said in an email.

The Ministry ofForests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development will determine when that process will begin within the next few days.

As for anglers like Haglund, not only does he want to see more support for the community's homeless residents, but wants to see the river kept clean for future generations of anglers and nature lovers.

That's got to start with cleaning up the trash, he said.

"Our local groups are trying to do stuff. We have cleanups on weekends, we try to resolve the problem ourselves. But it needs to go higher.

"All of us who fish this river, we all feel the same way."

Fishermen on the Chilliwack River on Tuesday, November 5, 2019. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)