Medicine Hat News

Vancouver tent city to temporaril­y close over unsafe and unhygienic conditions

- ASHLEY JOANNOU

Residents in Vancouver’s only legal tent encampment are wary of a city plan to force them to temporaril­y move while it cleans up the site, an advocate said.

Fiona York said there’s a fear among the dozens of residents of Crab Park in the Downtown Eastside that what the city says is only a one-week displaceme­nt could turn into a complete eviction.

“Time and time again, we see in other cities, and here in Vancouver, that ... (there have been) so many other tent cities evictions in the last five years,” she said.

Vancouver’s deputy city manager Sandra Singh said the proposed plan is to shut down the section of Crab Park designated for the tent city for a week starting March 25 so equipment can be brought in to clean piles of debris and unsafe structures.

Park Board general manager Steve Jackson said staff assessed the site in January and realized the area couldn’t be cleaned by hand. He said the dangers include debris, propane tanks, needles, feces and a rat infestatio­n.

But York said residents frequently clean their area and don’t want to live in an unsanitary environmen­t. She said they’ve suggested the encampment be cleaned in sections, rather than all at once, or that the city provide residents with resources to clean it themselves.

“(I’m) frustrated about the lack of communicat­ion, given all of the feedback and all of the reasonable responses that have been provided by residents and myself,” she said.

York said discussion­s around leaving should await a decision over a human rights complaint that alleges the tent city is not being provided with basic needs such as washrooms and electricit­y.

Singh said the amount of debris makes it unsafe for residents to clean it themselves and too difficult to do in phases. She said she considers the human rights complaint a separate process from the cleanup plans.

She said that the proposed plan has been posted for residents to see and that staff from the park board will be at Crab Park for the rest of the week to collect feedback and make adjustment­s if needed.

Effective March 18, residents will have a week to move to a different undisclose­d location elsewhere in the park, before fences go up and cleaning starts.

“We know this is going to be stressful. There’s no way to do this work that isn’t stressful for people,” Singh said,

“We recognize that one of the things that we can do to help with that is to provide certainty as soon as (is) feasible.”

Singh said the city’s actions are not a decampment, since the estimated 30 to 50 people staying at the site will be allowed to return.

Rules that will need to be followed after the cleanup include having only a single tent in a three-metre-by-three-metre space, and not having materials such as generators, propane tanks and building materials.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? A person sits in a tent at a homeless encampment at Crab Park in Vancouver in this 2022 CP file photo.
CP FILE PHOTO A person sits in a tent at a homeless encampment at Crab Park in Vancouver in this 2022 CP file photo.

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