Vancouver Sun

Metro, Belcarra park cabin residents off to court

District attempting to evict tenants

- JENNIFER SALTMAN jensaltman@postmedia.com twitter.com/jensaltman

Residents of a handful of cabins in Belcarra Regional Park will be in B.C. Supreme Court this week to fight for the right to continue living in their homes.

The Metro Vancouver Regional District, which owns and operates the park, gave notice in March 2018 that it was ending the tenancy of those renting the cabins that are nestled in the woods along the shoreline south of the park’s picnic area, main beach and pier.

The residents appealed the notice, which was overturned in February by an arbitrator with the Residentia­l Tenancy Branch.

The arbitrator said that because Metro hadn’t, at the time, establishe­d a use for one of the cabins, or obtained permits to convert the others from residentia­l rental units to interpreti­ve landscape displays, it couldn’t end the residents’ tenancy.

After that decision, the regional district, which is looking to phase out residences in all of its parks, applied for a judicial review.

According to the petition it filed to the court, Metro is hoping the court will set aside the branch’s decision and allow the evictions to stand or send the matter back to the branch for reconsider­ation by a different arbitrator.

“We say, of course, the decision was very reasonable and well within the scope of the arbitrator’s permissibl­e discretion, and was in fact the right, correct decision because it doesn’t make sense in a housing crisis to evict anybody when you don’t know what you’re going to do with the unit that they’re being evicted from or you’re just going to leave it empty,” said Oliver Pulleyblan­k, the lawyer representi­ng the Belcarra South Preservati­on Society.

Metro’s board of directors has approved a plan to open the Belcarra South area for public use, which will involve repairing the seven cabins — six of which are occupied — and historic Bole House, and keeping them empty for viewing.

Residents proposed allowing the public into the area while still allowing residents to stay in the cabins and act as interpreti­ve guides, but that idea wasn’t considered.

“Their concern ... is that they’re being kicked out when there isn’t a plan for what’s going to happen, and the plan of just leaving them empty so people can look at them is half-baked at best, and then they’re being forced out of their homes for no good reason,” said Pulleyblan­k.

He noted that the rental market in the Metro area remains tight, and it will be difficult for the cabins’ residents, many of whom have been there “a very long time,” to find accommodat­ions.

Altogether, the residents of the six cabins pay just over $3,100 per month, or about $525 each, and have month-to-month rental agreements with Metro. The average rental rate for a one-bedroom apartment in Vancouver is $2,100 per month, according to PadMapper.

The case is expected to be in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver on Wednesday and Thursday.

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