Vancouver Sun

Need for more shelter space is `dire' for homeless in Tri-Cities, advocate says

- SARAH GROCHOWSKI

Time is running out before most homeless people in Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam and Port Moody will be left out in the cold, a local advocate says.

Keir Macdonald, co-chair of the Tri-Cities Homelessne­ss and Housing Task Group, says the region is set to lose an emergency shelter that houses anywhere from 30 to 40 people at Coquitlam's SureStay hotel.

Its lease, which the province first provided funding for during the pandemic, is up in April.

Coquitlam's extreme weather shelters, open every year between October and March to house homeless residents overnight, will also close in April.

“The situation is dire and it is about to get worse,” said Macdonald.

Since 2015, the Tri-Cities has had one permanent, year-round shelter at 3030 Gordon Ave. with 30 overnight beds and 30 supportive housing units.

Macdonald is now calling on local citizens to lobby Tri-Cities municipal and provincial politician­s to set aside more funding for supportive housing and social service supports in their community.

“There is still not a single place homeless people in the Tri-Cities can go during the day, to take a shower, do laundry, or grab a meal — just those basic necessitie­s,” said Macdonald.

“Emergency shelters were able to bring people indoors overnight, but at 7 a.m. they had to be on a bus to Lincoln SkyTrain station.”

On Friday, collapsed tents and mounds of garbage were signs of a homeless encampment that formed in the middle of Coquitlam's Cape Horn interchang­e.

The encampment, which lies between a railroad and several highway overpasses, was the site of a large fire on Jan. 13. It ignited from a candle lit inside a tent, according to Coquitlam Fire and Rescue. Authoritie­s said the man inside the tent at the time survived without injury.

Fire services previously warned the public that with low temperatur­es, risks of fire outdoors increase as campers often try to stay warm with candles or propane tanks.

At the time of the blaze, there were two other tents at the underpass encampment. What remains now are piles of debris strewn on the ground, including shopping carts, suitcases and an inside-out white purse with a grim message scribbled in black ink:

“No reason to live, this life sucks. I wish my car was running so I could gas myself and die,” the note reads.

Homelessne­ss is at an all-time high in the Tri-Cities, according to data from 18 years of Greater Vancouver's homeless counts. The latest tally, conducted in March 2023 by the Homelessne­ss Services Associatio­n of B.C. in partnershi­p with community groups, found the number of unhoused residents in the region has increased 86 per cent since 2020.

Figures show 160 people indicated that they are unhoused — 62 unsheltere­d and 98 sheltered — compared to the 86 people who said they were three years prior. The Tri-Cities was one of three communitie­s of 11 surveyed that saw the sharpest increase in homelessne­ss. The others were Delta and Richmond.

“It was bad and is only getting worse, and there is no hope on the horizon that anything is underway or coming down the pipeline soon that would see us arrest this slide,” Macdonald said.

“It is not OK that people are sleeping under underpasse­s for shelter and risking fire to keep themselves warm.”

 ?? PHOTOS: JASON PAYNE ?? Collapsed tents and strewn garbage mark a homeless encampment in the middle of the Cape Horn interchang­e in Coquitlam on Friday. The camp was the site of a fire on Jan. 13, caused by a candle in a tent. The area is now facing the loss of an emergency shelter.
PHOTOS: JASON PAYNE Collapsed tents and strewn garbage mark a homeless encampment in the middle of the Cape Horn interchang­e in Coquitlam on Friday. The camp was the site of a fire on Jan. 13, caused by a candle in a tent. The area is now facing the loss of an emergency shelter.
 ?? ?? Data shows homelessne­ss has shot up in the Tri-Cities and is now at an all-time high. Delta and Richmond have also endured sharp increases.
Data shows homelessne­ss has shot up in the Tri-Cities and is now at an all-time high. Delta and Richmond have also endured sharp increases.

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