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British Columbia

More than 50 people pushed out after fire at SRO in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

A number of people were displaced Saturday, after a fire forced the evacuation of a single-room occupancy (SRO) building offering supportive housing to women in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

Sereena's Housing for Women was evacuated, cause of the fire has yet to be determined

A fire truck sits in front of a small squat building.
40 firefighters responded to a fire at a single-room occupancy building in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside on Saturday, which forced dozens of people out of their homes. (Nick Allan/CBC)

A Saturday morning fire at a single-room occupancy (SRO)building in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside forced an evacuation and displaced a number of peoplewho were living there.

The fire broke outaround 8 a.m. atSereena's Housing for Women at 143 Dunlevy Avenue, a supportive housing projectrun by Atira Women's Resource Society.

According to fire officials, it started in a suite on the second floor of the building, spread to other suites on the same floor and then reachedthe third floor.

No injuries have been reported and the cause of the fire is currently being investigated.

"Nobody is going back in until the damage assessments [are finished] and utility go back on," said Assistant Fire Chief Brian Bertuzziat around 9:30 a.m."We've knocked the fire down now and we've got quite a few displaced residents right now."

According to theAtira Women's Resource Society website, the SRO has 56 rooms.

Janice Abbott, the CEO of Atira, said it was the second fire in the suite on Saturday morning an earlier fire was put out by sprinklers and firefighters around 3:30 a.m., she said.

"Everyone, I think, is doing okay under the circumstances," she said. "We've got a place for them to go today ... there's only around five rooms impacted."

Most of the residents are expected to make their way back by Monday, according to Abbott. Bertuzzi said the building housed more than 50 women.

Latest incident in string of fires on the DTES

Saturday's fire is just the latest in a series of fires in Vancouver's poorest neighbourhood.

Earlier in September, two fires on the same daydisplaced nearly 40 people living in SROs. In late August, over 60 people lost their homesafter afire on Princess Avenue.

Community members continue to raise concerns aboutthe series of blazes, and are calling for more action from the city to ensure Vancouver's mostvulnerablepeople are kept safe.

"Why, almost every week, are we having fires like this that are displacing so many people?" asked BeeLee Lee,the vice president of theCoalition of Peers Dismantling the Drug War.

Lee, who captured video of the incident early Saturday morning, saidcity data shows many SRO operatorsin the city are committingfire code violations. Lee feelsofficials aren't treating the situation like a crisis and sayscalls about fire hazards and flammable materials are not being answered fast enough.

"It's not normal," she said. "If citizens are calling in and saying, look, we see something ... please respond to it quickly."

With files from Nick Allan