Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Homeless In Abbotsford Not Responsible For Defecating In Parks: Lawyer

The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2015 01:24 PM
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — The City of Abbotsford is wrong to blame the homeless for defecating in public spaces after dumping chicken manure at encampments in an effort to evict people, a lawyer has argued.
     
    David Wotherspoon, with the Pivot Legal Society, said the city is discriminating against the homeless with bylaws that prohibit them from setting up camps overnight.
     
    He wants a B.C. Supreme Court judge to declare such measures unconstitutional.
     
    The homeless are being criminalized for leaving human waste and garbage at camps but the city isn't providing needed services, Wotherspoon told Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson on Tuesday.
     
    "People make garbage, people have to urinate, people have to defecate. They have to do it somewhere," he said.
     
    "Blaming Abbotsford's homeless for the existence of those circumstances is, effectively, blaming the victim," said Wotherspoon, who represents the War Drug Survivors.
     
    "Suggesting that Abbotsford's homeless should be responsible for the choice of being homeless is wrong," he said.
     
     
    "There are real choices being made, but those are choices that relate to the city — the choice not to provide a variety of services."
     
    Lawyers for the city were expected to make closing arguments later Tuesday in response to the lawsuit.
     
    The trial, which began in June, has heard that the city's homeless have been repeatedly removed from public spaces through various means.
     
    The War Drug Survivors represent at least 151 homeless people and maintains that the city's 25 available shelter beds, provided by the Salvation Army, can't accommodate everyone.
     
    Abbotsford has already presented evidence suggesting more housing is available, but the group counters that most of the spaces are difficult to access, especially for drug addicts.
     
    The B.C. Civil Liberties Association is an intervener in the case and its lawyer also argued in favour of striking down the bylaws.
     
    "It falls to the city to craft the bylaws that respect constitutional rights," said Alison Latimer.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Way Of Tracking Senior Abuse In B.C. Could Give Better Picture Of Problem

    New Way Of Tracking Senior Abuse In B.C. Could Give Better Picture Of Problem
    VICTORIA — B.C.'s Office of the Seniors Advocate is launching an initiative aimed at getting a better picture of elder abuse and neglect in the province.

    New Way Of Tracking Senior Abuse In B.C. Could Give Better Picture Of Problem

    Three Ontario Sisters Stopped By Police For Biking Topless Demand An Apology

    Three Ontario Sisters Stopped By Police For Biking Topless Demand An Apology
    Three sisters in Ontario are demanding an apology from a police officer who they said stopped the women as they were riding their bicycles topless and told them to cover up.

    Three Ontario Sisters Stopped By Police For Biking Topless Demand An Apology

    Crown May Proceed With B.C. Logging Auction Against First Nations' Wishes: Court

    Crown May Proceed With B.C. Logging Auction Against First Nations' Wishes: Court
    B.C. Supreme Court has dismissed an injunction application by the Blueberry River First Nations connected to almost 1,700 hectares of marketable timber in the upper Peace River Region.

    Crown May Proceed With B.C. Logging Auction Against First Nations' Wishes: Court

    Worry Grows As Month Passes Without Trace Of B.C. Farm Workers From Mexico

    Worry Grows As Month Passes Without Trace Of B.C. Farm Workers From Mexico
    KELOWNA, B.C. — A perplexing mystery in the Okanagan is raising concerns of area police and the B.C. Fruit Growers Association.

    Worry Grows As Month Passes Without Trace Of B.C. Farm Workers From Mexico

    Self-proclaimed Israeli Ambassador Takes Mounties To Court In B.C.

    Self-proclaimed Israeli Ambassador Takes Mounties To Court In B.C.
    Neil MacKenzie, a spokesman for B.C.'s Criminal Justice Branch, said in an interview that prosecutors are now assessing allegations raised by Andrew Fidler during a private prosecution launched in Burns Lake provincial court.

    Self-proclaimed Israeli Ambassador Takes Mounties To Court In B.C.

    New Zealand Confirms 2 Bodies Found In Avalanche Debris Are Missing Canadians

    New Zealand Confirms 2 Bodies Found In Avalanche Debris Are Missing Canadians
    Police said a post-mortem conducted Wednesday confirmed the deceased were Louis-Vincent Lessard and Etienne Lemieux, both aged 23.

    New Zealand Confirms 2 Bodies Found In Avalanche Debris Are Missing Canadians