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Helps wants B.C. to seize hotel rooms, put homeless people in them

Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps wants the B.C. government to use its emergency powers to requisition empty hotel and motel rooms for people without homes during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Lisa Helps
Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps

Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps wants the B.C. government to use its emergency powers to requisition empty hotel and motel rooms for people without homes during the COVID-19 outbreak.

In a motion going to committee of the whole today, Helps and councillors Sarah Potts and Jeremy Loveday urge the province to take immediate action to get people off the streets or, failing that, to allow the city to declare a local state of emergency.

Helps told reporters Wednesday that the city has 鈥渉it a wall鈥 after working hard on the issue with B.C. Housing and Island Health for the past month.

She said B.C. Housing requires increased powers to secure the rooms, while Island Health needs more resources to provide supports to people once they move off the street.

鈥淚t is absolutely naive to think that COVID-19 will not hit the unsheltered population in our city, and when it does, those people are going to be using the same hospital beds and acute-care beds that everybody else will,鈥 she said.

Helps has appealed directly to聽provincial health officer Dr.聽Bonnie Henry as well, writing聽that Victoria is in a 鈥渃risis situation.鈥

Shelters were forced to reduce their numbers to allow for physical-distancing, so now people with mental-health and addiction challenges are living in more than 120 tents crowded together on Pandora Avenue, Helps says in the April 4 letter, a copy of which was included in council鈥檚 agenda package.

The mayor states that although the city and B.C. Housing have secured nearly 200 hotel rooms for people without homes, hotel owners have made it clear that they don鈥檛 want people with mental-health and addiction problems staying in them.

鈥淢aybe the province should issue an order to all motel owners noting that they must make their facilities available to B.C. Housing for whatever purpose B.C. Housing deems necessary,鈥 she writes.

Meanwhile, the city has established a temporary tenting site at Topaz Park, which is now at capacity.

Helps says it鈥檚 鈥渘ot good enough鈥 to be sheltering people outside in the midst of a pandemic.

B.C.鈥檚 Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing issued a statement that did not directly address the issue of using emergency powers to requisition hotel and motel rooms.

Instead, the ministry said B.C. Housing continues to negotiate with motels and hotels to secure more spaces and expects to finalize additional contracts in the coming weeks.

The ministry added that it鈥檚 trying to find a site for an emergency-response centre that will provide more spaces.

鈥淥nce a site has been secured, we鈥檒l work with Island Health and our partners to identify and assess potential residents.鈥

A number of non-profit agencies and nurses in Victoria, however, say the current approach isn鈥檛 working. The agencies wrote a letter to provincial ministers this week, warning about the 鈥渄ire situation鈥 facing people without homes and advocating the emergency requisition of hotel rooms or the purchase of permanent housing.

鈥淲e are four weeks into COVID-19 restrictions and do not yet have the necessary resources to mobilize a response for those experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness to ensure the same health protections available to others,鈥 says the letter from the SOLID Outreach Society, AIDS 91原创 Island and Peers Victoria Resources Society.

SOLID spokesman Mark Willson said the current process of B.C. Housing negotiating with hotels and motels to secure rooms 鈥渏ust isn鈥檛 getting us anywhere.鈥

Even if the rooms are secured, Willson said local non-profits don鈥檛 have the resources to provide the necessary supports to people living there or at encampments across the city.

鈥淲e鈥檙e feeling that the province needs to let us know how we can do our jobs right now to make sure everyone鈥檚 safe, because the fear is palpable at this point,鈥 he said.

鈥淲e鈥檙e dealing with a really vulnerable population that doesn鈥檛 necessarily have anywhere to go, and doesn鈥檛 necessarily have the proper supports.鈥

Bernie Pauly, a professor of nursing at the University of Victoria and one of the signatories to the letter, said it鈥檚 only a matter of time before the virus hits the street community the same way it arrived in prisons and long-term-care homes.

鈥淚 really think time is running out and we鈥檙e going to end up chasing the pandemic in these overcrowded settings,鈥 she said.

Once the virus arrives, it will be difficult to contain, she said, because many of the people have chronic health conditions and don鈥檛 have their own bathroom or a place to self-isolate.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had prime ministers and many people saying: 鈥楴o one will be left behind,鈥 鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I think as the clock ticks, people are being left behind.鈥

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