Kelowna approves supportive housing project despite outrage from neighbours - Action News
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British Columbia

Kelowna approves supportive housing project despite outrage from neighbours

Kelowna city council has approved a controversial B.C. Housing project that will see a 52-unit supportive housing building developed on a vacant lot surrounded by condos and houses in the city's Midtown neighbourhood.

Proponents say the 52-unit facility will give stable housing to people currently living on the streets

A conceptual drawing of the 52-unit supportive housing complex that will be built on Agassiz Road in Kelowna's Midtown neighbourhood. (City of Kelowna)

Kelowna city council has approveda controversial 52-unit supportive housing building developedon a vacant lot surrounded bycondos and houses in the city's Midtown neighbourhood.

The project, led by B.C. Housing, will provide homes and social services for homeless and at-risk Kelowna residents. Drug and alcohol use will be allowedat the housing complex and there will be harm reduction serviceswhere residents can use drugs in a supervised environment.

More than 200 people packed into city council chambers Thursday night for a public hearing,which lasted until nearly 1:30 a.m.Friday as approximately 65 people spoke to council about the project.

Council unanimously approved a bylaw amendment to green-light the building, despite strong objections from many of the residents who live close to where it will be built.

"I will always believe in building a city where everyone belongs, where there are no segregated and exclusive neighbourhoods, where we fosterinclusion," said KelownaMayor Colin Basran.

'Shame on you'

Many of the residentsopposed to the facility were seniors who spoke about their fears that it will bring an increase in drug use and crime to their neighbourhood.

"It's a high-density areain which over 600 seniors live within 500 feet from this address," said Donna Burbank.

"This plan for housing the drug addicted and homeless in our area will put added stress and introduce new risks into the lives of senior residents."

Around 200 people packed into Kelowa city council chambers on Thursday evening for a the public hearing on a supportive housing complex on Agassiz Road. (Brady Strachan)

Others emphasized that although Kelowna needs housing for the homeless, it would be better suited to an area away from so many residences, likethe Hearthstone supportive housing building located in an industrial part of the city.

"If you allow this project to pass as itis, I say shame on you," said Geraldine Bush. "What you are proposing for our neighbourhood is unconscionable."

Stabilizing effect

Proponents like non-profit organization The John Howard Society, which will manage the building, tried to assuage neighbours' concerns.

The organization's executive director,Gaelene Askeland,said most of the residents will not be active drug users.

"The people that will be living therejust want safety too,"Askeland said.

Askeland went on to add that getting homeless people in secure housing often has a stabilizing effectand allows people to reassess their priorities in life.

She told councillors that she doesn't believe opening this facility will have a detrimental effect on the quality of life of people already living in the neighbourhood.

'Fear has spread like a plague'

Other speakers also encouraged city council to approve the project, citing a desperate need for homes for the 286 peoplecounted as homeless in Kelowna in March 2018.

"The predator in this scenario is not the homeless person," said Peggy Salaberry. "The predator is fear, and this fear has spread like a plague."

Other peoplewho spoke in support of the housing complex had experienced homelessness themselvesand sharedstories of how stable housing has allowed them to turn their lives around.



"I just hope you guys consider the lives that could be helped," said Calib Jones, wholived on the streets a year ago.

"A warm mealand a roof over your head, with some privacy, is an opening to the heart and a chance for people to focus on themselves instead of their stuff and the person that is living two feet away from them."

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story included an incorrect spelling of Gaelene Askeland's name.
    Jan 20, 2019 10:45 AM PT