Provincial park ordered closed after homeless campers move in - Action News
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British Columbia

Provincial park ordered closed after homeless campers move in

The province now says there is no deadline for around 30 homeless campers to leave Goldstream Park near Victoria, after the group faced eviction Thursday morning.

Tent city residents moved to Goldstream Provincial Park after being asked to leave other spaces this week

B.C. Parks closed Goldstream Provincial Park on Wednesday evening, less than a day after homeless campers moved in. (Elizabeth McArthur/CBC)

The province now says there is no deadline for around 30 homeless campers to leave Goldstream Park near Victoria, after the group faced eviction Thursdaymorning.

The group of homeless campers who had hoped to settle for two weeks at a provincial park near Victoria were originally told on Thursday morning to pack up and leave, less than a day after setting up their tents.

The group was ordered off a provincially owned green space in nearby Saanich earlier this week, just days after a court order forced them out of another park that some of the campers had occupied since the spring.

B.C. Parks closed GoldstreamProvincial Park at 5 p.m. PT on Wednesday.

Park rangers andRCMPwere on site Thursday morning, asking any remaining campers to leave. A stream ofRVsdrove out of the park as activists drove U-Hauls in the other direction, heading to pack up the homeless campers' belongings.

B.C. Housing Minister SelinaRobinson released a statement on the closure, saying the province is sending personnel to work with campers to finda long-term solution.

"The park is not an appropriate place for the establishment of a tent city," Robinson said. "We urge those atGoldstreamto work with staff to identify better housing solutions."

Chrissy Brett, a spokespersonfor the campers, saidthe decision to close was a surprise because the group believed it was abiding by campground rules and had just completed the paperwork required for passes granting disabled people a free stay for up to two weeks at the park.

Chrissy Brett, who has been acting as a spokesperson for the campers, said the group believes it is abiding by campground rules. (Michael McArthur/CBC)

In July, North Thompson Provincial Park near Clearwater, B.C., was suddenly closed and all campers were ordered to leave as RCMP evicted a protest by an Indigenous group opposed to the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

The park closure was originally approved by the province from July 6-9 for acultural ceremony, butsome people stayed behind to protest thepipeline project.

With files from Elizabeth McArthur

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