Times Colonist

Woodwynn residents facing eviction

‘No occupancy’ notices posted at Central Saanich farm’s treatment centre, but operator plans to defy them

- JEFF BELL

Central Saanich has posted “no occupancy” notices on some of the buildings and recreation­al vehicles at Woodwynn Farms addiction treatment centre, a move that operator Richard Leblanc says could effectivel­y put the site’s six residents on the street.

He said the notices will not be complied with, and the outcome could be a legal battle with Central Saanich.

The 78-hectare Woodwynn Farms, at 7789 West Saanich Rd., offers programs for live-in participan­ts who have dealt with homelessne­ss or substance-abuse problems.

The program has been operating for 8 1⁄2 years.

“We can farm our farm — that hasn’t changed,” said Leblanc, who oversees Woodwynn Farms as executive director of the Creating Homefulnes­s Society.

“The problem is that we’re a treatment centre for people at the same time, and we’re trying to help people and have them live here off the streets.”

Residents have been living in the recreation­al vehicles, Leblanc said, adding that a proposal to build temporary housing for up to 40 farm workers was turned down by the Agricultur­al Land Commission.

The housing would have been on just one per cent of the land, he said.

Leblanc said the timing of the municipal notices couldn’t be much worse.

“It’s cold, it’s rainy and it’s Christmas,” he said.

“It’s horrible all the way around.”

Central Saanich Mayor Ryan Windsor said the notices were handed out because of safety concerns, citing a recent fire in an RV.

“Apparently no one was in it at the time, but it burned down.”

Windsor said the notices, posted on the RVs, washroom structures, greenhouse and accessory buildings, take effect immediatel­y.

Municipal officials visited the farm after the RV fire and noted safety issues. Leblanc said the notices for the accessory buildings were the result of the officials’ concerns about permits. One notice indicates that buildings, plumbing and waste-disposal permits were not approved under the building bylaw.

Dan Fortin, 51, said the RV where he stays has become his home in the past two years and he has nowhere else to go.

He said he is now feeling guilty for sleeping in his own bed.

Farm resident Kylie Janzen, 35, said she has been working hard to get back to having a life with her daughter, and that Woodwynn Farms is able to change people’s lives.

“It’s good for me here,” said Janzen, who has been at the farm for about 14 months.

Having to leave would be “pretty devastatin­g,” she said.

“I still have lots to work on. It doesn’t happen overnight.”

Central Saanich and the farm have been at odds before.

The municipali­ty placed a nooccupanc­y order on a barn in 2013 and filed a notice of civil claim in 2014 to try to shut the farm operation down.

 ??  ?? Woodwynn Farms’ volunteer Nicholas Fodor, left, walks past a trailer with residents Kylie Janzen and Ryan Colwell.
Woodwynn Farms’ volunteer Nicholas Fodor, left, walks past a trailer with residents Kylie Janzen and Ryan Colwell.
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 ??  ?? Residents Dan Fortin, left, and Ryan Colwell with a no-occupancy sign that was attached to their recreation­al vehicle at Woodwynn Farms. Fortin says he has lived in the RV for the past two years and has nowhere else to go.
Residents Dan Fortin, left, and Ryan Colwell with a no-occupancy sign that was attached to their recreation­al vehicle at Woodwynn Farms. Fortin says he has lived in the RV for the past two years and has nowhere else to go.
 ??  ?? Woodwynn operator Richard Leblanc in a washroom where a no-cccupancy notice is taped to the wall.
Woodwynn operator Richard Leblanc in a washroom where a no-cccupancy notice is taped to the wall.

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