Times Colonist

Vancouver modular project faces pushback

- GEORDON OMAND

VANCOUVER — Constructi­on has hardly begun at the first of Vancouver’s temporary modular housing projects, and already pushback is mounting against the city’s latest strategy to house homeless people.

Vancouver was granted an injunction this week from the Supreme Court of British Columbia to dislodge protesters who were preventing work crews from accessing a constructi­on site in the tony neighbourh­ood of Marpole.

Some residents feel blindsided by the move and are critical of a decision they feel puts children in danger. Three schools are close to the project, including an elementary school directly across the street.

The Marpole site will feature two buildings with a total of 78 units, each of which will measure about 23 square metres and contain a kitchen and washroom.

The project is part of a $66-million investment from the provincial government to build 600 units across Vancouver. Another 2,000 modular living quarters are planned across B.C. over the next two years.

Derek Palaschuk, a spokesman for the Caring Citizens of Vancouver Society, said the community fully supports the constructi­on of modular housing and solving homelessne­ss in Vancouver.

“It’s the right idea but wrong location,” he said.

“You should not put our children at risk by having this modular housing … 25 steps from an elementary school.”

Palaschuk cited city documents that reserve at least 20 per cent of the units for tenants who may have a criminal past and a high risk to re-offend, a history of property damage, aggressive and intimidati­ng behaviour, and poor housekeepi­ng and hygiene.

Ethel Whitty, Vancouver’s director of homelessne­ss services, said it is typical for residents to resist this kind of project before embracing it, which has been the experience with the 13 permanent supportive housing initiative­s across the city.

“People forget they’re even there,” Whitty said.

“That’s the thing. In some cases there will be resistance right in the very beginning. The community advisory committees will be set up and people will come once a month and then quarterly and then interest kind of drops off because, in fact, the housing just becomes integrated into the community.”

Other groups have expressed support for the project, including an organizati­on made up mostly of students from Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School, a block from the Marpole project.

Holly Morrison, 17, a spokeswoma­n for Marpole Students For Modular Housing, said the idea for the group came after she and other students saw adults calling themselves Marpole Students Against Modular Housing, demonstrat­ing outside the school.

“We kind of felt like we had maybe our voices stolen from us,” Morrison said. Homelessne­ss is not the fault of the individual but of society as a whole, she said.

“These aren’t inherently bad people. These are people who have just been dealt a bad hand of cards.”

The group plans to push for better transit and a cheaper grocery store in the neighbourh­ood, Morrison said.

Several other sites around the city have been earmarked for modular units, though another proposed site in the centre of the city’s Downtown Eastside that would replace a tent city has prompted a backlash. Residents issued a statement accusing the B.C. government of stinting on the need for more permanent social housing.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Opponents have attached their own placard to a City of Vancouver project informatio­n sign in the tony neighbourh­ood of Marpole, where 78 units of temporary modular housing are being constructe­d to house homeless people.
DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Opponents have attached their own placard to a City of Vancouver project informatio­n sign in the tony neighbourh­ood of Marpole, where 78 units of temporary modular housing are being constructe­d to house homeless people.

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