Housing advocates say City of Vancouver should have notified them about tent removal plans - Action News
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British Columbia

Housing advocates say City of Vancouver should have notified them about tent removal plans

Housing advocates say the City of Vancouver should have notified them about their plans to remove tent encampments in the Downtown Eastside earlier this month, allowing them to help prepare supports for the people living there.

Encampment removals require collaboration with the community, says former minister of poverty reduction

VPD officers form a line to push back protesters and advocates while city employees work to dismantle tents along East Hastings in the downtown Eastside neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia on Wednesday, April 5, 2023.
City employees dismantle tents and structures along East Hastings Street in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside neighbourhood on April 5. B.C.'s former minister of poverty reduction says the City of Vancouver should have collaborated with community organizations before carrying out encampment removals. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Housing advocates say the City of Vancouver should have notified them about their plans to remove tent encampments in the Downtown Eastside earlier this month.

Shane Simpson, former B.C. Minister of Poverty Reduction, says many community organizations and agencies were "scrambling" to help people in wake of the removals.

"[The removal] was successful but the fallout of what happens after that has not been good," said Simpson.

"You have all these agencies that deliver supports they had no idea this was happening ...and they're scrambling still."

On April 5, city officials and the Vancouver Police Department cleared a tentencampment on the Downtown Eastside along East Hastings Street, citing public safety and fire-related concerns.

B.C. Housing MinisterRavi Kahlonsaid at the timehis understanding from the city is that 36 people were removed on the first day of the removal.

Simpson and other advocates say the city needs tocommunicate directly with local organizations so they can prepare supports for the people affected.

"There are just some outstanding activists who are working incredibly hard in a really difficult situation," Simpson said.

"[The City has] to make a distinction between a law-and-order approach and a public safety approach."

City workers throw a tent into a trash truck.
City employees shove a tent into a garbage truck on the Downtown Eastside on April 5. Shane Simpson, who grew up in the neighbourhood, says he has seen the community change over the years. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Collaboration is essential: former minister

Simpson, who served as minister from 2017to2020, has a long history with the Downtown Eastside.

"I grew up as a young child right on the corner of Campbell and Hastings ... It was poor, alcohol was an issue, heroin was an issue, but it was stable very much so," said Simpson, adding many years later, the neighbourhoodhas changed and "lost its way."

In May 2020, Simpson says his teamworked with non-profitand housing organizations in the Downtown Eastside on the removal of the tent encampment at Oppenheimer Park.

The removal was a response toCOVID-19 pandemic restrictions,with the city, provinceand police working together to relocatenearly 300 people from the encampment to hotels and shelters.

Simpson says these collaborative efforts areessential, notinghis team identified over 600 housing spaces before the removal.

"When things go on, people come together in the neighborhood and find a solution," he said. "That opportunity has to be created there."

Christine Wilson, director of advocacy for Indigenous women at the Downtown Eastside Women's Centre, says they've seen an influxof women accessing their shelters and resource centres after the removal of tents from East Hastings Street.

"We are working with a marginalized population. Women who are on disability living in SROswho are absolutely homeless women that are Indigenous," she said, adding the encampment removals often leave women vulnerable to violence.

A police officer talks to a person wearing a jacket marked 'CEDAR', while a person in the background holds up two signs reading 'Where is Love' and 'You Threw out HOMES'.
A person holds signs as police officers assist city staff to remove tents from encampments in the Downtown Eastside on April 6. Christine Wilson with the Downtown Eastside Women's Centre says tent encampment removals leave many women vulnerable to violence. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

She says the city and province need to address mental health issues head-on by creating more treatment facilities like the Red Fish Healing Centre in Coquitlam, whichhelps peopleexperiencing mental health and addiction issues through a trauma-informed approach, with access toIndigenous healing spaces.

"If we could emulate that [support], that would be amazing because that takes away the barriers most face when they do want to seek treatment."

'Catch a breath'

Matthew Trudeau, public information officer for the Vancouver Fire Department, says they've removed nearly 149 propane tanks from the tent encampment on East Hastings Street, which he says has significantly improved fire safetyin the neighbourhood.

He addsthat80 tents and structures havebeen reduced to nearly 20 to 30 tents over the last two weeks.

He also says the main priority is to help people access shelter spaces, and thatthe fire department, cityand social service providers have been meeting almost daily to co-ordinate support access, although he did not specify what type of supports were being offered.

"We are trying to keep an eye on where people are going ...and for sure keeping up on trying to get people into shelters," he said.

In a statement, Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon said the province, through B.C. Housing, is developing a co-ordinated plan with community and government partnersto support people experiencing homelessness in the Downtown Eastside.

"We're working as quickly as possible with all of our partners to bring people living outside in the Downtown Eastside inside, but these are challenges that have grown over many years," he said.

With files from On The Coast