Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
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

    B.C. LNG Industry Could Bring Billions In Taxes: Conference Board Of Canada

    B.C. LNG Industry Could Bring Billions In Taxes: Conference Board Of Canada
    The board found that if the industry produces 30 million tonnes per year of LNG, Canada's economy would grow by $7.4 billion a year over 30 years. 

    B.C. LNG Industry Could Bring Billions In Taxes: Conference Board Of Canada

    Bad Edmonton Dry Cleaner Gets House Arrest For Using Toxic Chemical

    Bad Edmonton Dry Cleaner Gets House Arrest For Using Toxic Chemical
    Ali Khair-Eldin, owner of First Class Cleaners and Todd Cleaners, pleaded guilty to unlawfully importing and using tetracholorethylene, also known as perc.

    Bad Edmonton Dry Cleaner Gets House Arrest For Using Toxic Chemical

    Quebec Lawyer Working On Appeal In Justin Bourque Case Appointed As A Judge

    Quebec Lawyer Working On Appeal In Justin Bourque Case Appointed As A Judge
    Quebec's Justice Department has confirmed that the lawyer who agreed to file an appeal on behalf of convicted cop killer Justin Bourque has been appointed as a judge in Quebec.

    Quebec Lawyer Working On Appeal In Justin Bourque Case Appointed As A Judge

    Police Charge 4 People With Trading Controlled Satellite Camera Tech To China

    Police Charge 4 People With Trading Controlled Satellite Camera Tech To China
    RCMP allege the four were involved in creating and selling microelectronics, specifically a sensor, to two Chinese companies — one of them state-owned. 

    Police Charge 4 People With Trading Controlled Satellite Camera Tech To China

    B.C. To Establish New Law On Environmental Spill Response And Preparedness

    Mary Polak says amendments to the Environmental Management Act would also seek to establish a new spill preparedness and response system to tackle environmental emergencies.

    B.C. To Establish New Law On Environmental Spill Response And Preparedness

    Burnaby's Indo-Canadian RCMP Officer Paul Pabla Charged With Drunken Driving

    Burnaby RCMP detachment said constable Harinder Paul Pabla is accused in two incidents -- both of which took place while he was off-duty

    Burnaby's Indo-Canadian RCMP Officer Paul Pabla Charged With Drunken Driving