May 23, 2024
‘It is unsafe’: Vancouver asks police to help end Hastings Street tent encampment  | Globalnews.ca

‘It is unsafe’: Vancouver asks police to help end Hastings Street tent encampment | Globalnews.ca

City of Vancouver staff, accompanied by Vancouver police officers moved in Wednesday morning to remove structures and tents along East Hastings Street and bring the encampment to a close.

In a statement, staff said this move comes after “a steady deterioration in public safety and an increase in fires in the area and the encampment zone.”

City staff and members of the VPD will be working Wednesday to remove all remaining tents and structures from the area, which is about 80 in total, according to the City of Vancouver.

However, some residents told Global News they will just return to the area tonight.

Story continues below advertisement

“We need to restore East Hastings Street as a safe place in the Downtown Eastside,” Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim said Wednesday at a press conference.

“The days ahead will be challenging but if we work together I know we will see a more safe and prosperous Downtown Eastside.”

Story continues below advertisement

In July 2022, the Vancouver fire chief issued an order to remove structures along East Hastings due to the extreme fire risk posed by structures adjacent to buildings.


Click to play video: 'Sidewalk tents complicate SRO fire response on Downtown Eastside'


Sidewalk tents complicate SRO fire response on Downtown Eastside


Since then, the City of Vancouver says staff has been working daily to address fire concerns, safety concerns and health concerns.

Story continues below advertisement

The city says more than 400 outdoor fires have been started on East Hastings Street over the last eight months and four people have been injured this year.

Vancouver fire chief Karen Fry said Wednesday there is a “persistent fire risk” posed by the tents and encampments.

“Since the fire order went in place, we have seen 1,600 propane tanks removed,” she said. “1,600.”

Vancouver police say officers have reported an increase of nine per cent in assaults in the DTES since last August with 28 per cent of those occurring in the encampment zone.

Read more:

Leaked documents reveal plan to remove Hastings Street tent encampments: advocates

A recent survey from Atira Women’s Society found all respondents reported feeling unsafe or having experienced violence in the area, including sexual assault.

Vancouver Police Chief Const. Adam Palmer said Wednesday it has become too challenging to keep people safe in the Downtown Eastside.

“Street-level assaults in the encampment have increased 27 per cent,” he said. “It is unsafe.”

“Nineteen police officers have been assaulted inside the encampment,” Palmer added mentioning some of them were very serious.

Story continues below advertisement

He added that police officers are on the scene to support city workers and to keep people safe.

“Most people who live in the Greater Vancouver region would be afraid to walk down this street,” Palmer added. “It’s probably one of the few streets in British Columbia that people would have fear to walk down or take their families down there. There’s not many other streets in our province where most would feel like that, but that’s certainly one.”

The city is urging people who live on East Hastings Street to accept shelter offers.

However, critics say this is not a viable plan.

Story continues below advertisement

The Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users said it received City of Vancouver documents that detailed a plan to remove the tents and structures.

“This document signals the end of Vancouver’s so-called compassionate approach to encampments,” Jess Gut, an organizer with Stop the Sweeps, said in a statement.

“The city and the province have failed to create enough dignified housing. They’re now choosing to use blunt force to make people disappear from the street.”


Click to play video: 'Body of woman found inside tent on Hastings Street'


Body of woman found inside tent on Hastings Street


Vince Tao, the community organizer at VANDU, said at a press conference Monday this area of the Downtown Eastside has become a community and residents have nowhere to go.

“The city is escalating its violence on the individuals that most need care in this city,” he added. “There is absolutely no place for these people to go.”

Story continues below advertisement

Tao called the move an example of “banishment.”

VANDU is calling for a moratorium on moving any people until there is adequate housing for those living in the DTES.

East Hastings Street is currently closed between Main Street and Columbia, VPD confirmed. Transit has also been re-routed at this time.

More to come…

&copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Source link