Thursday, January 29, 2009

Committee to End Homelessness Applauds Decision in Latest Anti-Camping Case


photo: planned expansion of centennial square, next to city hall, exemplifies elected officials' priorities.


Group plans creation of user-run encampments of temporary emergency abodes

Victoria, January 29, 2009 - The Committee to End Homelessness, a grassroots advocacy group in Victoria, BC, applauds yesterday's court ruling in the City of Victoria's case against homeless campers.

The Committee to End Homelessness believes that the only viable solution to homelessness is housing (and associated supports), but recognizes that it will take several years to provide real housing for most people on the street. Meanwhile, there remains a significant number of people who are vulnerable to the increased health and safety risks associated with living outside.

"Homeless people have – for now – the right to erect temporary shelter on city-owned land," says Chris Johnson, a member of the Committee to End Homelessness. "If they choose to assert this right, we want them to know that a large group of people are ready and willing to support them in a variety of ways."

The ruling comes at a time when the Temporary Autonomous Shelter Committee (TASC), a newly-formed collective of housed and unhoused individuals closely allied to the Committee to End Homelessness, is actively researching the viability and logistics of creating a community of temporary emergency shelters in Victoria.

TASC is launching a survey of homeless and unstably housed people to determine the demand for temporary shelter encampments and collect input into plans to create these encampments. Following this survey will be a consultation with the wider community, to address their fears regarding autonomous emergency shelter.

Research has proven that a user-run encampment, with a firm code of conduct and well- organized support, can be a viable short-term alternative to the current shelter system. A variety of sanctioned 'tent cities' across North America provide solid evidence that issues of safety, sanitation and unsightliness can be mitigated with proper planning and support.

The Committee to End Homelessness is supporting TASC to follow a transparent, collective process, and is aware that TASC is not ready at this point to undertake a temporary shelter project of it's own.

However, the Committee to End Homelessness supports the right of homeless individuals to erect and maintain temporary shelter, and are willing, along with members of TASC, to offer our support in the form of logistics and legal advice to those wishing to assert this right.

Media contact: Chris Johnson - 778-430-3310 - forestaction@yahoo.ca

Temporary Autonomous Shelter Research Portal

editor's note:

in similar fashion as the previous mayor, dean fortin appears entirely unprepared for the judge's ruling which was 2 weeks in the making. city hall has no offer of appropriate space for homeless tenters (ellice park remains empty and entirely appropriate except for the fence and no trespassing signs), neither have they prepared any bylaws or other 'rules' to regulate where tents will and will not be accepted. it's almost as if the city's hoping for another takeover of beacon hill park so they can garner public disapproval quickly. it's a divide and conquer tactic - very unprofessional and unproductive, especially given the fact this discussion has been on-going for over two years and the new mayor is allegedly concerned about those less fortunate.

Click here to access another article about the judge's most recent ruling, honouring the previous bc supreme court ruling that finds it unconstitutional to criminalize people who attempt to protect themselves from the elements.