Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Downtown Eastside social housing project expands to four lots, with health services

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2024 04:09 PM
  • Downtown Eastside social housing project expands to four lots, with health services

A housing project in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside is being expanded from one city lot to four and will include community health and social services.

B.C. Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon says the proposed development at the 300-block of East Hastings Street at the former site of a Buddhist temple will be expanded after a donation of adjacent land from the charitable 625 Powell Street Foundation.

The original plan in 2018 called for 75 housing units, but foundation director Don McKenzie says under the expansion it will provide up to 200 people at risk of homelessness with affordable and supportive housing in a building up to eight storeys high.

Kahlon says the first floor will be dedicated to community health services.

He says the province, BC Housing and Vancouver Coastal Health will work with the City of Vancouver on an application to redevelop the site this fall.

The minister says since March 2023, the government has opened more than 750 new and renovated housing spaces in the Downtown Eastside and another 850 new and renovated spaces are currently underway.

"We know that the need in this community in particular is great," Kahlon said at a news conference Friday in the Downtown Eastside. 

"We have SROs (single-room-occupancy units) that are not in good condition and we know we need to move away from SROs."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. seniors feel 'invisible and forgotten,' new seniors advocate says

B.C. seniors feel 'invisible and forgotten,' new seniors advocate says
Seniors in British Columbia are feeling "invisible and forgotten" as they fall thorough the cracks in existing provincial support systems, their advocate says. In his first report as B.C.'s senior's advocate, Dan Levitt says affordability was the top concern during visits with hundreds of seniors in more than 20 communities in April.

B.C. seniors feel 'invisible and forgotten,' new seniors advocate says

Weather window may help search for three missing mountaineers: B.C. RCMP

Weather window may help search for three missing mountaineers: B.C. RCMP
Police and rescue teams hope a window of good weather will help the search for three mountaineers lost since Friday on Mount Garibaldi in British Columbia. A Squamish RCMP spokeswoman says the clearing conditions could allow an aerial assessment of the area before search and rescue teams are deployed in the "complex terrain."

Weather window may help search for three missing mountaineers: B.C. RCMP

Fatal stabbing in Chinatown

Fatal stabbing in Chinatown
Police say they're investigating a fatal stabbing this morning in Vancouver's Chinatown. They say officers responded to a report of a man in medical distress on Union Street just before 3:30 a-m. 

Fatal stabbing in Chinatown

Family phone plans hinder escape from domestic violence: Women's Shelters Canada

Family phone plans hinder escape from domestic violence: Women's Shelters Canada
Women's Shelters Canada is calling on phone companies to adjust how they respond to those escaping from domestic violence, saying the costs of changing a phone number and difficulties leaving a shared plan are key barriers for victims.

Family phone plans hinder escape from domestic violence: Women's Shelters Canada

Cybersecurity standards emerging in Canada as ransomware business booms

Cybersecurity standards emerging in Canada as ransomware business booms
The ransomware business is booming in Canada. Recent victims have included large corporations such as retailer London Drugs, as well as the City of Hamilton, Ont., and the government of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Cybersecurity standards emerging in Canada as ransomware business booms

Bank of Canada cuts key interest rate for first time in more than four years

Bank of Canada cuts key interest rate for first time in more than four years
The Bank of Canada cut its key interest rate for the first time in more than four years Wednesday, marking a major turning point in its fight against inflation. With the quarter-percentage-point cut, the central bank’s key interest rate now stands at 4.75 per cent.

Bank of Canada cuts key interest rate for first time in more than four years