Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

British Columbia

In Surrey, a new battleground emerges for long-term RV dwellers

Dogwood is the latestbattleground for RV dwellers seeking an affordable home amidst Metro Vancouver's housing crisis. The Surrey RV park is also emblematic of the struggles cities face as they grapple with how to deal with an increasing number of people living in RVs.

City says it's trying to balance needs of long-term tenants with campground's intended use

RVs parked close together near a field at dusk.
The Dogwood Campground and RV park in Surrey, B.C., currently houses about 80 long-term residents. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Tessa Nendick and her common-law husband moved their RV into theDogwood Campground and RV Park in September 2018.

The couple had been living in an RV for four years to avoidrising rents in the Lower Mainland.

"We're good people," said Nendick, 28, who works as a barista at a hospital coffee shop. "We just live in an RV."

They agreed to pay more than $1,000 a month for a concrete pad at Dogwood, a city-owned and operated facility right off Highway 1 in the Fraser Heights community.

Three months and a new baby later, they left.

The park operator told them they would have to move because a city bylawrestricts guests from staying longer than 182 days per year at touristaccommodations, including campgrounds.

Nendick also discovered that the city also charges more than $200 a month extra at Dogwood in the summer.The couple chose to try and find a more secure, and cheaper, spot elsewhere.

Battlegrounds

Dogwood is the latestbattleground for RV dwellers seeking affordable, stable accommodationsamidst Metro Vancouver's housing crisis. It's also emblematic of the struggles cities like Surrey face as they grapple with an increasing number of people living in RVs.

Last month, Surrey councillors voted to ban people from staying in RVs overnight on city streets.

Meanwhile, long-term residents at the Peace Arch RV Park were told they had to leave because of the 182-day provision in the zoning bylaw. The owners later rescinded that order.

Parks like Dogwood and Peace Arch were never intended to serve as permanent homes. But as the cost of housing increases, more people are turning to them as an affordable place to live.

Some people like the Nendricksalso turn to them because their RVs provide them with a sense of ownership and independence.

The City of Surrey says it has made several improvements to the Dogwood Campsite and RV Park since it took over operations in 2017. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Surrey faces a dilemma in how to regulate these parks. Officials say the city isn't actively enforcing the 182-day rule. Critics saythe policies are unclear and this is unfair.

Former Surrey mayor Bob Bose, who has a friend living at Dogwood, says the city shouldn't be applying itsbylaws to some people and not others.

Instead, Bose is calling on the city to repeal the 182-day provision of the zoning bylaw. Bose says itcauses uncertainty for the hundreds of RV dwellers who live in RV parks scattered across the city.

"Many of these folks are on limited incomes," Bose said. "There are noplaces to which they could be relocated so there's an incredible amount of stress."

Different rules and rates

The city took over operations at Dogwood in 2017 when the former operator's lease expired. The city says fewer than halfits 176 tent and RV sitesareoccupied by long-term tenants.

Workers have made improvements to the campground, the city says, including major upgrades to the main washroom and shower facilities, new lighting throughout and upgrades to the pool.

Some critics say it's unfair that some residents at the Dogwood Campground and RV Park have to abide by city bylaws and others don't. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Officials say the city isn'tapplying the 182-day restriction to grandfathered residents, many of whom are elderly and have lived there for years only to new tenants like Nendick.

Nendick says the grandfathered tenants only pay $800 a month.

The city says it's trying to balance the needs of the park's long-term occupants with the facility'sintended use as a family campground for visitors.

Managing expectations

Surrey City Councillor Brenda Locke says city staff are evaluating options for how to manage Dogwood in the long-term amidst a housing crisis with few affordable homes.

"I don't disagree that there are better ways for people to be housed. However, they don't exist," Locke said.

Several sourcessay city staff are preparing a corporate report with options for Dogwood.Locke says the city isn't looking to redevelop the site or plan a mass eviction.

Locke says she's not in favour of a two-tiered bylaw system, but it's only temporary until council see the report and vote on the options.

"[It]would be terrible if you let people come in with the expectation that they're going to be able to live there for a long time," she said.


Do you have a tip, feedbackor story you would like to share about living in an RV in the Lower Mainland or B.C.? Send it to reporter MaryseZeidler at maryse.zeidler@cbc.ca