Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Park Board Rejects Injunction To Oust Campers From Downtown Park

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Sep, 2019 08:34 PM

    VANCOUVER - Park board commissioners in Vancouver have voted not to seek an injunction that would have cleared a tent encampment from a Downtown Eastside park.

     

    Commissioners heard from 22 speakers during a lengthy emergency meeting on Thursday to consider a response to the more than six- month-long encampment at Oppenheimer Park.

     

    Representatives from Vancouver City Hall as well as the police and fire departments all spoke in favour of an injunction during the meeting.

     

    Commissioner Camil Dumont agreed tents are unwanted but said clearing them should be more collaborative and peaceful.

     

    His motion calling for shelter or permanent housing for park campers was eventually adopted in a 4-2 vote.

     

    The park board has been facing mounting pressure to get an injunction to clear Oppenheimer Park or hand over jurisdiction to the city.

     

    City officials issued eviction notices in August over what it said were safety concerns, and more than half of the roughly 200 campers accepted other accommodation, although others refused to budge.

     

    That prompted Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart to urge the park board to temporarily give jurisdiction of Oppenheimer to the city. He argued the city is better able to negotiate with senior governments on behalf of the campers.

     

    Stewart also said those who refused to leave might need a "nudge" to make the move to social housing.

     

    The park board, not the city, has complete jurisdiction over Vancouver parks and it rebuffed Stewart's suggestion that it hand over interim control of the Park.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Security-Clearance Backlogs Bedevilled RCMP As Employee Allegedly Leaked Secrets

    Security-Clearance Backlogs Bedevilled RCMP As Employee Allegedly Leaked Secrets
    The RCMP was struggling to keep staff security clearances up to date during the time a senior employee allegedly tried to pass secrets to adversaries, an internal Mountie audit shows.

    Security-Clearance Backlogs Bedevilled RCMP As Employee Allegedly Leaked Secrets

    B.C. Premier Horgan Says It's Time To Add Value To Province's Forestry Products

    The government announced a $69 million aid program last week for communities and workers hurt by the industry downturn.

    B.C. Premier Horgan Says It's Time To Add Value To Province's Forestry Products

    B.C. Reveals Who Will Participate In Its Upcoming Money Laundering Inquiry

    B.C. Reveals Who Will Participate In Its Upcoming Money Laundering Inquiry
    VICTORIA - British Columbia's public inquiry into money laundering has approved the applications of 16 of 20 government organizations, gaming groups and individuals to participate.    

    B.C. Reveals Who Will Participate In Its Upcoming Money Laundering Inquiry

    Trudeau Meets Greta Thunberg In Montreal As Climate Marches Dominate Federal Campaign

    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Friday he agrees with Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg that he needs to do more to fight climate change.    

    Trudeau Meets Greta Thunberg In Montreal As Climate Marches Dominate Federal Campaign

    RCMP To Release Report Today On B.C. Homicides That Sparked Massive Manhunt

    Bryer Schmegelsky, who was 18, and 19-year-old Kam McLeod were the subject of a two-week manhunt that spanned Western Canada.

    RCMP To Release Report Today On B.C. Homicides That Sparked Massive Manhunt

    B.C. Father Andrew Berry Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Slaying Of Two Daughters

    VANCOUVER - A jury has found a father guilty of killing his two young daughters in his apartment in a Victoria suburb on Christmas Day in 2017.

    B.C. Father Andrew Berry Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Slaying Of Two Daughters

    PrevNext