Wednesday, 27 Nov 2024

COVID-19: Vancouver, Victoria homeless camps must be emptied by early May, gov’t orders

A B.C. government order to facilitate the moving of homeless people from Vancouver’s Oppenheimer Park encampment into temporary hotel housing will also apply to two camps in Victoria, and will require the camps to be empty by early May.

Yet the transition — meant to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus within groups of people already at risk — will be a temporary one, with the goal of moving people into longer-term housing at a later date, officials are promising.

The province and BC Housing detailed their plans on Saturday to transition hundreds of people from homeless camps in both cities into more than 1,000 acquired hotel spaces in an effort to protect them from the spread of the novel coronavirus.

The ministerial order, issued by Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth under the Emergency Program Act, will bar the entry of any additional people into Oppenheimer Park and camps in Victoria’s Topaz Park and Pandora Avenue starting Saturday.

Those three camps must be clear of existing campers by May 9, according to the order.

Violation tickets may be issued to anyone violating the order past those dates, the province said.

“In this provincial state of emergency, our priority is public safety,” Farnworth said in a statement, adding the order is also meant to address an earlier state of emergency issued due to the overdose crisis across B.C.

Global News first reported the province was set to announce a plan to move campers out of the controversial Oppenheimer Park tent city in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside starting on Saturday and over the coming weeks.

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BC Housing estimates roughly 300 people will be moved from that camp alone, but expects the majority of campers will leave voluntarily, based on what outreach workers have heard from those campers.

Health officials say no COVID-19 cases have been identified within either of the Victoria homeless encampments.

The province says professional movers have been hired to help move people’s belongings to the hotel sites, and that movers will be given masks and gloves to protect themselves from contracting the coronavirus.

Officials say self-identified families will be kept together during the moving process as much as possible.

The hotels, which will be accessed by referral only, will be staffed based on need. Residents will be given meals and access to necessary medications.

BC Housing says they expect the hotel spaces to be leased for three to six months as work is done to secure more permanent housing solutions. Staff estimate 5,000 modular and supportive housing units already under construction are set to be opened over the next 12 months.

Yet Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart has said the city doesn’t have the money to build additional housing needed to fully address the homeless crisis, as municipal coffers have been stretched to their breaking point due to the pandemic.

BC Housing said it is not its intention to have people leave the temporary hotel spaces and go back to the streets, saying it is working hard to secure longer-term housing.

Homeless advocates have called for the securing of hotels to house vulnerable people for weeks, with some even occupying a Vancouver school to send the message to Stewart and city officials.

Victoria city council has also supported the idea, and Mayor Lisa Helps on Saturday applauded the province for coming through.

“This approach to helping our most vulnerable residents is thoughtful, prudent and ultimately will keep all of us safer during this pandemic,” she said in a statement.

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