Times Colonist

Town hall today seeks middle ground between park dwellers and stewards

- KATIE DeROSA

The tense debate over camping in Beacon Hill Park will play out today during an online town hall the organizer hopes will yield solutions on how to protect the park and find safe shelter for those living in it.

“The impetus is that a lot of people are reaching out to me and saying: ‘Look, this has got to end,’ ” said Stephen Andrew, one of nine candidates vying for the council seat left vacant by Laurel Collins when she resigned after being elected MP. The byelection to replace her has been postponed due to the pandemic

Andrew said the City of Victoria and the provincial government have failed to provide proper support for both the people living in the park and the surroundin­g community. He hopes the online town hall will be a place for creative ideas on how to address people’s safety concerns and the rights of people without homes.

“We definitely have a vulnerable population living in the park,” Andrew said. “Camping is not a solution to homelessne­ss. The issue is finding the space to place these individual­s.”

About 340 people who were living in tents in Topaz Park and along Pandora Avenue have been housed in hotels converted into supportive housing units.

However, many people who did not get housing moved into parks including Beacon Hill Park, where about 100 people are sheltering.

It’s the “appearance of lawlessnes­s” that is frustratin­g park goers, Andrew said, adding that it’s up to the community to take reasonable solutions to the city and the province.

A Change.org petition called Save Beacon Hill Park, started by Cynthia Diadick, has more than 20,000 signatures.

Some park users and nearby residents have said they have been threatened while walking through the park and are concerned about crime and open drug use. Victoria police are investigat­ing a suspected bicycle “chop shop” in the park, and a group of city parks staff is refusing to work in the park after two city employees were threatened.

Members of the Friends of Beacon Hill Park have raised concerns about fire hazards, especially in hot and dry conditions.

Concerns have also been raised about the impact of encampment­s on sensitive Garry oak ecosystems, prompting the city to seek a court order to prohibit camping in some areas of the park.

Nevin Thompson, a James Bay father of two who lives a block from the northwest corner of the park, where some people are camping, said he has never felt unsafe when walking through the park during the day.

However, he said, if city employees say they feel unsafe, they deserve to have their experience­s acknowledg­ed.

It’s also important to recognize the humanity of people without homes who face dangerous situations every day, he said.

“It seems supremely uncaring to say: ‘These people are making life dangerous for us.’ No, they live in a precarious situation, in a life-and-death situation,” Thompson said. “You can’t tell people to get out of the park — where are they going to go?”

The online townhall is scheduled to start at 4 p.m. To register, go to eventbrite.ca and search for Beacon Hill Park.

 ??  ?? About 100 people are sheltering at Beacon Hill Park.
About 100 people are sheltering at Beacon Hill Park.

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