City of Vancouver apologizes for harm caused during daily street sweeps in the Downtown Eastside - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:50 AM | Calgary | -12.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

City of Vancouver apologizes for harm caused during daily street sweeps in the Downtown Eastside

Advocates have been calling for an end to street sweeps for years, saying the practice displaces people and their belongings.

The city says it's working on an alternative way to keep streets clean

A group of city workers in high-vis jackets clean a street.
Vancouver city workers clean up on East Hastings Street in the Downtown Eastside in April 2020. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The City of Vancouver apologized for harm caused during daily"street sweeps" of the Downtown Eastside andvowed tofind an alternative wayto keep the streets clear in a statement sent to CBC Wednesday.

The apology follows a motion before Vancouver city council Tuesday evening calling for changes to the way sweeps are conducted.

During these sweeps, which occur daily from Monday to Friday, city workers accompanied bypolice officers clear debris fromsidewalks of the Downtown Eastside.

The city said their crews are trained toremove litter, garbage, and structures that are abandoned, but not items that are "clearly personal belongings."

But advocates saythe sweepers sometimes throw out items people value.

"We sincerely regret and apologize for any harm and trauma that has been created as a result of this work and recognize important items have been discarded," saidTaryn Scollard, deputy general manager of engineering in the statement.

The motion, which was brought forward by Coun.Jean Swanson, callsfor the city to develop an alternative community-led process for clearing the streets using peer workers rather than police.

It also calls for the development of storage facilities and the creation of a system where people can easily retrieve items that are taken.

A tent in Crab Park located on the shores of Vancouver's Burrard Inlet on Wednesday. A sign from Pivot Legal Society posted on it reads, "This tent is my home." (Justine Boulin/CBC)

The motion did not go to a vote butScollard said city staff willincorporate items from the motion into their work with the community this summer. She said they will have more information to share in the coming weeks.

Const.Steve Addison from theVancouver Police Department said in a statement to CBCpolice officers will no longer accompany city workers after July 1.

Addison said the city asked officers to accompany workers due to safety concerns.

"We have long argued that this is an inappropriate use of police resources and is not a core policing service, however we temporarily obliged the request," wrote Addison.

Belongings taken

Meenakshi Mannoe, who works as a campaigner at Pivot Legal Society, said sweeping the streets to keepsidewalks clear and safe makes sense in theory.

In reality, however, Mannoe said the way the city implements the policydisplaces people who rely on public space.

An estimated $2,410 worth of personal property was seized by sweepers over a five-day period in 2021, according to a report conductedby several organizations including Pivot Legal Society.

Through interviews with people who experienced street sweeps, they found items takenincluded tents, clothing, documents, identity cards, mobility devices, family heirloomsand photos.

Mannoesaid these belongings are either thrown out or stored in a way that makes itdifficult for people to retrievethem.

"People aren't given notice about where their belongings are taken. They're not given a receipt on what was taken.... What we hear from folks is that their belongings are trashed."

A game of 'whack-a-mole'

A city worker who conducts these sweeps once compared their job to the game 'whack-a-mole' because they were constantly relocating people, said Swanson.

"They move people from one place and then they go to another place. And then they have to move them from that place, etc."

Tents and structures in front of a music venue, The Imperial, located on Main Street in Vancouver. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

Swanson recalled a sweep she observed where a man suffering from pneumonia was asked to move his tent from Oppenheimer Park on a cold day.

"He had no place to store his tent, no way to carry it or anything ... he just threw up his hands and walked off."

As a volunteer for theCarnegie Community Action Project at the time, she knew there was no available housing for him.

Because the motion did not move forward in council on Tuesday, the city announced speakers would not be heard in Wednesday's Standing Committee meeting.

Pivot Legal Society said in a statement more than 30 community members were signed up to speak in support of the motion at Wednesday's meeting.

With files from Joel Ballard