Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

The Canadian Press, 31 Jul, 2015 06:10 PM
  • Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — A judge may not be able to solve homelessness, but he could use his powers to bar officials in Abbotsford, B.C., from prohibiting camps that provide the necessities of life, a lawyer has argued.
 
B.C. Supreme Court heard Friday that there's ample evidence that dozens of people living in makeshift tent communities have been subjected to "systemic forced evictions" in the Fraser Valley city.
 
City officials have dumped chicken manure on campsites, said David Wotherspoon, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society.
 
Police have pepper sprayed people's belongings, cut up tents and laid down tree trunks in a series of "displacement tactics," he added.
 
"We're not asking court to order that housing be provided," Wotherspoon told the judge.
 
"But what the court can do is tell the City of Abbotsford that if those necessities are not being provided in some other way, they cannot interfere with an individual's efforts to obtain them themselves."
 
Wotherspoon's assertion comes at the culmination of a five-week trial launched by the Drug War Survivors, who are challenging city bylaws that make it illegal to set up shelters in public spaces.
 
The group representing the area's homeless contends the city has been consistently violating their charter rights.
 
A favourable decision would establish a right to public space for homeless people and be a crucial step toward recognizing a right to housing in Canada, according to Pivot, the legal advocacy organization helping the homeless group.
 
Court heard there were at least 151 homeless in Abbotsford in 2014, people who have been consistently chased from site to site rather than be offered genuine living assistance.
 
They have been criminalized to the point where there's no place where they won't be breaching the law, Wotherspoon said in his closing arguments.
 
The city's lawyers have stated multiple facilities are available, but Wotherspoon called the claim a "red herring." Only 25 true beds can be counted, he said.
 
Some of the city's so-called shelters are actually treatment centres that have a high threshold for admittance, he countered.
 
"What Abbotsford's goal has really been is to move people out of Abbotsford," he said.
 
Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson told the lawyer there are legal restrictions and other considerations confronting him in the case.
 
"I have some very serious concerns about perpetuating a situation where there are hundreds of hypodermic needles, human feces, rotting garbage. It's an unhealthy environment," he added from the bench.
 
"If your clients … aren't able to avoid those kind of problems, giving them carte blanch to stay as long as they like in a location doesn't seem to be an effective answer."
 
Outside court, a former homeless man of 15 years described his struggles on the street and said he hopes the judge allocates land for people to inhabit.
 
"I've lived out there. I've been freezing cold where my hands were so numb I had to warm my hands over a candle," said Harvey Clause, 54, who testified at the trial.
 
"I think we have a chance to do something for people. We do, if the judge is willing to give us a chance."
 
The trial is scheduled to conclude next week.

MORE National ARTICLES

City Of Abbotsford Used Pepper Spray And Manure Tactics To Evict Homeless: Lawyer

City Of Abbotsford Used Pepper Spray And Manure Tactics To Evict Homeless: Lawyer
Pivot Legal Society lawyer David Wotherspoon told a B.C. Supreme Court judge that the homeless have been pepper sprayed by police and had chicken manure dumped on their campsite

City Of Abbotsford Used Pepper Spray And Manure Tactics To Evict Homeless: Lawyer

Nandini Jha, Mississauga Mom Convicted Of Killing Her 3-Year-Old Daughter Gets 10 Years In Jail

Nandini Jha, Mississauga Mom Convicted Of Killing Her 3-Year-Old Daughter Gets 10 Years In Jail
Crown lawyers alleged that Jha beat her daughter over many weeks, culminating in a final fatal attack.

Nandini Jha, Mississauga Mom Convicted Of Killing Her 3-Year-Old Daughter Gets 10 Years In Jail

Third Day Of Deliberations At Inquest Examining Deadly Blast In Burns Lake, B.C.

Third Day Of Deliberations At Inquest Examining Deadly Blast In Burns Lake, B.C.
Forty-five-year-old Robert Luggi and 42-year-old Carl Charlie died in the Jan. 20, 2012 blast that seriously injured 19 others and destroyed Babine Forest Products near Burns Lake

Third Day Of Deliberations At Inquest Examining Deadly Blast In Burns Lake, B.C.

Wife Of Dead Officer Says RCMP Made Her Husband 'Scapegoat' In Robert Dziekanski Death

The wife of an RCMP officer who killed himself two years ago claims that her husband was used by the Mounties a scapegoat in the death of Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver's airport in October 2007.

Wife Of Dead Officer Says RCMP Made Her Husband 'Scapegoat' In Robert Dziekanski Death

Jim Chu, Vancouver's Former Chief Constable Joins High Profile Private Sector Firm

Chu has joined the Aquilini Investment Group (AIG) as vice president of special projects and partnerships.

Jim Chu, Vancouver's Former Chief Constable Joins High Profile Private Sector Firm

Report On Environmental Response To Vancouver Oil Spill Set To Be Released

Report On Environmental Response To Vancouver Oil Spill Set To Be Released
VANCOUVER — A report reviewing the coast guard's environmental response to a fuel spill in Vancouver's English Bay that soiled several beaches is expected to be released Friday.

Report On Environmental Response To Vancouver Oil Spill Set To Be Released