Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Abbotsford Reviews Plans For Cabin Village For Homeless Residents

The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2016 11:26 AM
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — The City of Abbotsford is taking another look at a plan to house the homeless in a village of tiny cabins.
     
    City officials brushed off the idea when it was first proposed several years ago, but Jeff Gruban with the Abbotsford Dignitarian Society said attitudes are changing. 
     
    "We've applied for a temporary-use permit which gives us the legal authority to set up those cabins. That application is before the city and they are reviewing it," he said.
     
    The change was likely prompted by overflowing shelters and a B.C. Supreme Court decision allowing the homeless to sleep in parks overnight if no shelter spaces are available, said Gruban.
     
    He's confident he can win the support of housing and health authorities, as well as the homeless, themselves.
     
     
    "We have three people who are currently homeless on our board of directors. We have been very close with the people we're intending to serve. We have taken a lot of people down to our location, " said Gruban.
     
    "The people who I've spoken to love it."
     
    Gruban said if the society's application for a temporary-use permit is approved, a 40-cabin village could be set up within a month, complete with a dining hall and shared washrooms.
     
    He expects residents could begin moving into the single-bed cabins by early summer on a two acre lot near Highway 11, about two kilometres from the downtown core, on the east side of the Fraser Valley city.
     
    The plans are much like a village already operating in Portland, Ore., but Gruban said the Abbotsford cabin village would be the first in Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel
    VICTORIA — A review by a British Columbia's coroners' panel says two issues stand in the way of stopping more young people from dying of overdoses.

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel

    Would-Be Firefighters Flood B.C. Wildfire Service With Applications

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — There is no shortage of candidates to fill the estimated 200 vacant positions expected this summer with the B.C. Wildfire Service.

    Would-Be Firefighters Flood B.C. Wildfire Service With Applications

    B.C. LNG Minister Says 'we're Not Afraid' Of Federal Environmental Tests

    British Columbia's minister in charge of liquefied natural gas is heading to Ottawa for talks on how the federal government's promised changes to environmental reviews will impact the province's plans for a multibillion dollar LNG industry.

    B.C. LNG Minister Says 'we're Not Afraid' Of Federal Environmental Tests

    B.C. Seniors' Advocate To Probe Deadly Violence Among Residents At Care Homes

    B.C. Seniors' Advocate To Probe Deadly Violence Among Residents At Care Homes
    VICTORIA — British Columbia seniors' advocate says 16 people have died in the last three years in a disturbing trend of violence among elderly in residential-care facilities.

    B.C. Seniors' Advocate To Probe Deadly Violence Among Residents At Care Homes

    Ontario Top Court Awards Terminated 'Dependent' Contractors $125,000 In Lieu Of Notice

    Ontario Top Court Awards Terminated 'Dependent' Contractors $125,000 In Lieu Of Notice
    TORONTO — Ontario's top court has shut down another attempt by a kitchen company to get out of paying severance to two workers it alleged were contractors, not employees.

    Ontario Top Court Awards Terminated 'Dependent' Contractors $125,000 In Lieu Of Notice

    Canadian Transit Authorities Step Up Fight Against Graffiti Vandalism

    Canadian Transit Authorities Step Up Fight Against Graffiti Vandalism
    Canadian municipalities have been accelerating the fight against graffiti by requiring new transit vehicles to contain built-in protections to minimize the street art considered an urban scourge by some.

    Canadian Transit Authorities Step Up Fight Against Graffiti Vandalism