Close X
Saturday, January 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Minister backs shift away from privately owned rooming hotels after B.C. fire inquest

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2024 06:02 PM
  • Minister backs shift away from privately owned rooming hotels after B.C. fire inquest

British Columbia's housing minster says the province needs to shift away from accommodating vulnerable people in privately owned rooming hotels — but it won't be fast or cheap.

Ravi Kahlon's remarks come after the jury in a coroner's inquest into the deadly 2022 Winters Hotel fire in Vancouver made more than two dozen safety recommendations on Monday.

They include phasing out public funding for single-room occupancy hotels — often referred to as SROs — in privately owned buildings, and ramping up fire safety bylaw enforcement.

"We definitely need to move away from the private SROs over time. Doing that just overnight is a challenge, given that we do have people living in them, and we need to make sure people have housing available," Kahlon.

"But we've said for many years now that type of housing is not the type of housing we want people to live in. We need to work together with the City of Vancouver and the federal government, to reform how SROs are in our communities, and have housing that's better suited for people in our communities."

He said of the inquest jury's recommendations that "most of them make sense."

About 70 tenants were living in the Winters Hotel when lit candles left on a bed started a fire on April 11, 2022, sweeping through the building and killing Mary Ann Garlow and Dennis Guay.

The jury ruled the deaths of Garlow, 63, and Guay 53, as accidental, caused by thermal injuries and smoke inhalation. Their bodies were found in the rubble more than a week after the blaze.

The jury heard that the old structure was not designed with the same protections to slow the spread of fire that come in more modern buildings. Its sprinkler system didn't work on the morning of the blaze because it hadn't been reset since a smaller fire three days earlier.

A report to Vancouver's city council last year said there were 146 single-room occupancy buildings operating as of January 2023, with around 6,500 rooms. 

The report said nearly half of the buildings were privately owned, and nine buildings since 2019 had been "closed due to fires or city orders for unsafe conditions."

But Kahlon said the majority of SROs have good fire protections in place.

He said moving away from privately owned buildings would take time and come with a significant cost. Phasing them out would require partnerships to fast-track permitting processes. 

"We will have more to say on that in the coming months," he said. 

The operator of the building where the fatal fire happened said no "reasonable" amount of money could fix aging SRO buildings to make them safe. 

The Atira Women's Resource Society said in a statement that it fully supports the jury's recommendations.

"It is becoming increasingly clear that no reasonable investment in these buildings will ensure the health and safety of staff and tenants," Atira said of old SRO buildings, adding that it is now up to the province to "fund supportive social housing to the level that guarantees safety."

Atira said BC Housing should prioritize purpose-built housing and other long-term solutions moving forward.

"We have worked hard since (the fire) to improve safety in all the buildings that house our tenants, including ensuring all staff have appropriate training and resources in place in the event of another life-threatening emergency," said Atira, which added that it operates 3,150 housing units in the Lower Mainland. 

"We believe that when there is a commitment by government to fund supportive social housing to the level that guarantees safety, it would be an investment in the future."

The Winters Hotel was operated by Atira's property management arm with funding from BC Housing, but owned by Peter Plett.

The inquest jury's recommendations were addressed to BC Housing, the Ministry of Public Safety, the City of Vancouver, the provincial housing ministry, the Vancouver Police Department, Vancouver Coastal Health and Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services.

The recommendations to BC Housing include making lease agreements that hold building operators to higher standards than minimum fire code requirements.

Kahlon said the government had provided funding for safety training at SROs and was working with the Vancouver fire department to "figure out a path forward to make sure that the SROs, the privately held ones, have the safety measures they need in place."

Activist and former Vancouver city councillor Jean Swanson said she didn't know if ending public funding for operators to lease privately-owned buildings like the Winters was a good idea. 

"My fear is that if the non-profits aren't leasing the privately owned hotels that they're leasing, that those hotels will be gentrified and won't be available for low-income people," Swanson said Tuesday. 

Swanson said things such as better staff and resident training to deal with fires would be beneficial, along with assistive devices, regular fire drills and more stringent enforcement by the city. 

"How can they possibly wait three days before reactivating the sprinklers?" she said. "I was trying to deal with that when I was on council. You know, that should be immediate." 

Swanson said the model of non-profit operators leasing buildings from private owners is preferable to owners renting out buildings themselves and forcing out low-income tenants. 

"As soon as the tenant leaves, dies, is evicted or bought out, they raise the rents as much as the market will bear, so the rents in the privately owned hotels go up and then become unavailable for people who depend on social assistance or pensions," she said. "And that's happening in virtually all of the privately owned hotels in the Downtown Eastside."

"That's what I'm afraid of if that jury recommendation is implemented," Swanson said. 

The jury in a coroner's inquest does not place blame, but instead makes recommendations to prevent future deaths.

MORE National ARTICLES

PM urged to back off digital tax before White House hemispheric trade summit Friday

PM urged to back off digital tax before White House hemispheric trade summit Friday
Business leaders are seizing on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's trip to Washington on Friday to urge him to delay a controversial tax aimed at foreign tech firms that cater to Canadian audiences. The digital services tax, which takes effect in January, is deeply unpopular with Canada's most important ally and trading partner, says Goldy Hyder, president and CEO of the Business Council of Canada. 

PM urged to back off digital tax before White House hemispheric trade summit Friday

Canadian man in Gaza says Ottawa has asked him to be prepared to leave with family

Canadian man in Gaza says Ottawa has asked him to be prepared to leave with family
A Canadian man trying to get out of Gaza with his family says Global Affairs Canada has asked him to gather his documents and be prepared to leave at any moment through the enclave's border crossing with Egypt. An apparent agreement on Wednesday allowed hundreds of foreign passport holders and dozens of wounded Palestinians to leave Gaza through the Rafah crossing for the first time since the war began. 

Canadian man in Gaza says Ottawa has asked him to be prepared to leave with family

Cocaine use continues to show signs of increase across Canada

Cocaine use continues to show signs of increase across Canada
Statistics Canada said that cocaine use is continuing to show signs of increase in the country based on new data of wastewater monitoring. In most Canadian municipalities, cocaine levels increased from January to May 2022 compared with the same period in 2020, the national statistical institute said.

Cocaine use continues to show signs of increase across Canada

Local state of emergency in Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., as two water pumps fail

Local state of emergency in Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., as two water pumps fail
A state of local emergency has been declared in the Village of Harrison Hot Springs, east of Vancouver, as two of three pumps at the community's water treatment plant have failed. A statement from Mayor Ed Wood says the availability of water for drinking and firefighting could be at risk.

Local state of emergency in Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., as two water pumps fail

Indian-origin physiotherapist charged in connection with sexual assault in Canada

Indian-origin physiotherapist charged in connection with sexual assault in Canada
A 53-year-old Indian-origin physiotherapist has been arrested and charged in connection with sexually assaulting a victim at his clinic in Canada's Ontario province, police said. Iraj Daneshvar was arrested after police received information on October 23 that a victim was sexually assaulted during a physiotherapy visit at a clinic in the area of Yonge Street and Centre Street in Richmond Hill.

Indian-origin physiotherapist charged in connection with sexual assault in Canada

Educators 'heartened' as B.C. and Ontario mandate Holocaust education

Educators 'heartened' as B.C. and Ontario mandate Holocaust education
To combat rising antisemitism, both British Columbia and Ontario announced this week that they would introduce mandatory Holocaust education for high school students, teaching them of the murder of six million Jews and others during the Second World War by Nazi Germany.  Holocaust educators are applauding the move. 

Educators 'heartened' as B.C. and Ontario mandate Holocaust education