Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Victoria's Courthouse Campers On Move To Shelter After Months Outside

The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2016 12:34 PM
    VICTORIA — Wet, cold and windy nights adjusting tarps and pounding pegs into the soggy ground are about to come to an end for John Bertrim and dozens of others who have slept in tents on the Victoria Law Courts' lawn for months.
     
    Eric Lincoln also said Monday he is getting ready to take down his tent for a move indoors after two months' sleeping outdoors at the courthouse.
     
    Bertrim, his common-law partner Laurel Hanuse and Lincoln are among the first homeless people to volunteer to vacate the bedraggled tent village that sprung up last spring at the courts for a move into a temporary, government-funded shelter at a former Victoria Boys and Girls Club facility.
     
    "You need lots of tent pegs, lots of tarps to make sure your home is secure," said Bertrim, who is 39, noting he's been homeless for the past year.
     
    Tents blow away in the wind, he said.
     
    Lincoln, 44, said he arrived at the camp to be near his street friends after his wife Belinda Jack died in November. He said he's looking for a fresh start after too many bad choices, family break ups and personal losses.
     
    "It's very community oriented here," he said. "Everybody looks after everybody and the community has been very giving."
     
    People regularly arrive with food, clothing and cash, but it hasn't been a complete utopia, with at least one drug overdose death and a stabbing incident that sent one man to hospital and saw police chasing the male suspect through the leafy downtown neighbourhood.
     
    The camp fills the courthouse lawn with all sizes and colours of tents. The City of Victoria installed portable toilets and left a dumpster. A steel drum burns damp wood, emitting clouds of dense smoke that mingles with the constant smell of marijuana.
     
    Starting Tuesday, 40 people will leave the urban campground for warmth, food and help, but not a permanent home.
     
    Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps said 110 people are currently camping at the courthouse grounds, but the $500,000 shelter project can only take 40 people. The British Columbia government is contributing $400,000, Victoria $75,000 and the United Way is contributing $25,000.
     
    Helps said the shelter project includes indoor tents for privacy, three meals a day and services to help people find permanent housing. It is not a drop-in centre, she said.
     
    "There's basically a bedroom set up for everyone," she said.
     
    Helps said Victoria has been working with the government to ensure the remaining courthouse campers can stay at the site, even though the province owns the land.
     
    "We've been working hard with the province to not do anything to the people who are still there except continue to work to try and find housing," she said.
     
    Victoria has been wresting with the issue since a 2008 court ruling allowed people to pitch their tents in city parks when shelters are full.
     
    Helps said the city spends $600,000 annually on staff to clean up parks and police officers who enforce the bylaw that requires people to break camp at 7 a.m.
     
    She said the courthouse camp has put pressure on the city and the province to address the homeless issue in Victoria. Helps said she understands concerns of residents who question placing people with drug and mental health issues near school.
     
    "I feel like the city's been put in a very difficult position because the only vacant building we have happens to be beside a middle school," said Helps.
     
    Opposition New Democrat housing critic David Eby said homelessness is a provincewide issue.
     
    "It is a sad comment on the inadequacy and unavailability of shelters in B.C.," he said. "This is not a problem that is going to go away."
     
    Rich Coleman, B.C.'s minister responsible for housing, was not available for comment, but his ministry's website states that since 2001 the provincial government has invested $4.4 billion to provide affordable housing for low-income individuals, seniors and families.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Time To Get Rid Of Offensive Indigenous Mascots In Sports: TRC Commissioner

    Time To Get Rid Of Offensive Indigenous Mascots In Sports: TRC Commissioner
     The head of Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission says it's time to get rid of offensive indigenous mascots which would never be tolerated if they targeted any other cultural group.

    Time To Get Rid Of Offensive Indigenous Mascots In Sports: TRC Commissioner

    After New Hampshire Dog's Death, Long Odds Confront Effort To Ban Use Of Guns To Put Pets Down

    After New Hampshire Dog's Death, Long Odds Confront Effort To Ban Use Of Guns To Put Pets Down
    It was done in such a cruel manner. The dog was shot multiple times and left to die

    After New Hampshire Dog's Death, Long Odds Confront Effort To Ban Use Of Guns To Put Pets Down

    Mosque In Peterborough, Ont., Deliberately Set On Fire: Police

    Mosque In Peterborough, Ont., Deliberately Set On Fire: Police
    Police say they don't know the motive, and they don't have a suspect. They couldn't say whether the fire was connected to the attacks in Paris that the Islamic State is taking credit for.

    Mosque In Peterborough, Ont., Deliberately Set On Fire: Police

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's unexpected baptism of fire in international statesmanship began Saturday when he arrived at the G20 summit in Turkey, less than a day after the deadly Paris attacks.

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'
    It was an anonymous two-story house with an outdoor side staircase, nothing that looked ominous to Kevin Koliner when he passed by going to and from work

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'

    The New Brunswick Government Has Formed A Committee To Handle Incoming Refugees

    The New Brunswick government has formed a committee aimed at facilitating a smooth transition of the Syrian refugees to the province.

    The New Brunswick Government Has Formed A Committee To Handle Incoming Refugees