The Niagara Falls Review

Rise in tent cities linked to growing health fears among homeless, advocate says

B.C. officials struggling to find proper solutions for vulnerable population

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VANCOUVER—Public health officials need to do more to help Canada’s homeless population as encampment­s and tent cities grow across the country during the COVID-19 pandemic, an advocate says.

The comments come as B.C. cities struggle to find adequate solutions to look after their homeless population­s.

Fourteen people were arrested Sunday over allegation­s they broke in to a school in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

A group calling itself the Red Braid Alliance was part of the protest over what its members said was a plan to highlight a demand for housing.

Alliance member Listen Chen said she wasn’t hopeful that the city would address the homeless problem.

“The city and the province both have the emergency powers to requisitio­n every single empty hotel room in the city and to shelter people,” she said.

“The City of Vancouver is negotiatin­g with individual landlords to open up units, but I don’t expect hotel landlords are lining up to open their rooms to a stigmatize­d population.”

Those arrested, ranging from young adults to seniors, face charges of break and enter, Sgt. Aaron Roed with the Vancouver Police Department said.

The growth of such tent cities are a natural occurrence when homeless residents feel unsafe about their living conditions, and the COVID-19 pandemic has heightened those feelings, said Tim Richter, the president of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessne­ss.

“If they don’t want squats, if they don’t want expanded rise in encampment­s then there needs to be a much better and safer response to homelessne­ss today,” Richter said. “The necessary protection­s that public health is recommendi­ng for every other Canadian need to be in place for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.”

Victoria has requested the provincial government requisitio­n its empty hotels to house its homeless population while in Vancouver, a camp at Oppenheime­r Park has swelled to nearly 100 people, with nearby residents concerned about violence they say is occurring in the park.

Homeless people have different health risk factors than other citizens, such as underlying respirator­y concerns, Richter said, adding that increases the possibilit­y of an outbreak sweeping through the sites.

“The fact we have so many people at great risk of this disease for no other reason than lack of a home and access to adequate health care tells you we’ve got a pressing housing emergency in our country,” Richter said.

B.C.’s provincial health officer said she is aware of those concerns.

“We have two emergencie­s that we’re dealing with,” Dr. Bonnie Henry said Monday. “The one, our overdose crisis, has been compounded in many ways, particular­ly for those who are homeless and underhouse­d, people who have substance use disorders, it has been compounded by the restrictio­ns we’ve put in place to deal with the pandemic.”

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