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'Tent city' still providing refuge for Whitehorse homeless

As workers suck up leaves covering the Yukon government building lawn and drain the sprinkler system before freeze-up, residents of Whitehorse's 'tent city' are doing their best to fend off the bitter autumn winds.
Workers prepare Whitehorse's tent and trailer city for winter. (CBC)

As workers suck up leaves covering the Yukon government building lawnand drain thesprinkler system before freeze-up, residents of Whitehorse's first 'tent city' are doing their best to fend off the bitter autumn winds.

The cluster of tents, some swaddled in tarps for extra protection, sprouted upright below the premier's office in June and slowly grew over the summer.

This week a travel trailer joined the collection.

Forty-seven-year-old Piroska Szucsand her boyfriend bought the trailer to park at tent city because they had nowhere else to go. Szucs works at a local restaurant while her boyfriend has a job at the remote Cantung mine, just across the Yukon border in the Northwest Territories.

Originally from Hungary, Szucs lived in London, Ont. before coming to the Yukon. Shewas shocked by the lack of affordable housing Whitehorse and the extent of homelessness.

She's not sure how long they'll camp beside the government building, but they bought a generator for the trailer so they'll have heat and power as the temperatures drop.

The encampment is aglaring example of the Yukon's housing crisis, an issue that's front and centre for all political parties during the territorial election campaign.

And it'll be one of the first things the winners of the Oct. 11 vote will have to face when they show up for work.

Sixteen-year-old Ken Shore didn't even knowan election was underway, saying he's more preoccupied with basic survival. He can't live with his parents, but he'shoping he can move in withhis girlfriend before the snow flies.

"It's a just a little damp sometimes," said Shore. "That's why I'm kind of sick right now."

Shore attends an alternative learning program, partly for the food they offer as part of the package, he said.

Although the government hired a consultant in the summer to help 'tent city' residents find permanent homes, since he moved there a month ago nobody has come to talk to him, he said.

Whitehorse has no youth shelter and rental prices just keep on climbing. The average price for a single home in the city reached a new record high of $427,000 between April and June.