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Victoria mayor deactivates Twitter account after slew of criticism

Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps has deactivated her Twitter account in response to negative comments about homelessness in the city that she says were distracting from her attempts to highlight positive initiatives.
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Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps. March 2020

Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps has deactivated her Twitter account in response to negative comments about homelessness in the city that she says were distracting from her attempts to highlight positive initiatives.

On Friday, Helps tweeted about the Ocean Futures Innovation Hub, a proposed business hub for the marine sector in downtown Victoria. The tweet attracted a slew of comments criticizing Helps鈥檚 performance as mayor and bemoaning the homeless population that has become more visible during the pandemic, which has forced shelters to close or reduce capacity.

Critics also piled on after Helps shared a photo Saturday of a floating dock installed in the Gorge Waterway by Aryze Development.

Helps said it鈥檚 not the criticism that bothered her, since her tweets often attract negative comments from people who don鈥檛 like how she does her job.

鈥淐riticize me all you want. That鈥檚 fine,鈥 she said. But Twitter users were complaining about homelessness on posts unrelated to the issue, which Helps said distracted from the uplifting stories of business- and citizen-led initiatives she was trying to highlight.

鈥淓veryone鈥檚 working so hard to be positive and to bring forward positive initiatives that if my Twitter feed is a detraction from that, then it鈥檚 not worth it to me to be on there,鈥 she said.

Helps said there are useful ways for residents to communicate concerns, and commenting on Twitter isn鈥檛 one of them.

She holds monthly community drop-ins for residents to meet with her and have a conversation. The events have gone virtual during the pandemic.

She said no one attended her last drop-in on July 15. 鈥淣o one came to actually have a conversation about these issues.鈥

Helps acknowledges that the city, like many across the country, has a homelessness crisis that has worsened with the pandemic. She has called it 鈥渁 failure by everyone鈥 that anyone is living in a tent in Canada.

鈥淚t鈥檚 having a negative effect on so many people, those who are homeless and those who are housed. We鈥檙e working hard every day to manage the crisis and we鈥檙e working with the wonderful ministers and staff at the province to resolve it, to get people housed with the supports they need,鈥 Helps said.

Campers in Beacon Hill Park have become a point of tension in Victoria, with more than 19,000聽people signing a petition to 鈥渟ave鈥 the park from the roughly 100 people calling it home. The petition calls on the city to remove campers from the 83-hectare park.

More than 340 people have been moved into hotel rooms in buildings purchased by B.C. Housing during the pandemic.

But there aren鈥檛 enough indoor spaces. Beacon Hill is not the only place where people are taking shelter. A group of tents is set up in Centennial Square and in other pockets around the city.

Forcing people out of Beacon Hill won鈥檛 solve the problem as long as people are without homes, and it would go against the guidance of provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, Helps said.

Henry has suggested that local governments consider relaxing bylaws that prohibit sheltering, as Victoria has done. Council voted in May to allow 24/7 sheltering amid the pandemic.

鈥淐learing or moving encampments without providing shelter or housing immediately can cause people to disperse throughout the community and break connections with service providers. This increases the potential for infectious disease spread and may lead to isolation, which also poses health and safety risks to vulnerable people,鈥 Henry鈥檚 guidance says.

Those living in tents in Beacon Hill have been asked to move out of the park鈥檚 environmentally sensitive and culturally significant areas to other parts of Beacon Hill. Sheltering is allowed in about one-quarter of the park.

About 1,000 to 1,200 people are living in 40 encampments across the province.

Helps left Facebook in 2018, calling it a toxic echo chamber. She hasn鈥檛 posted to Instagram in more than a year. She plans to delete her account after a photo of a sunset over Willows Beach prompted 鈥渟ome really awful misogynist, deeply inappropriate comments.鈥

David Black, an associate professor in the School of Communication and Culture at Royal Roads University, said social media has provided residents greater access to share concerns with politicians. 鈥淏ut that also sometimes means that people aren鈥檛 measured and fair and evidence-based in their views,鈥 he said.

Helps said she鈥檒l be back on Twitter 鈥渨hen the time feels right.鈥 Residents can still share concerns with the mayor via email or phone, by requesting to address council or by joining a community drop-in. The next drop-in is Aug. 11 at 4:30 p.m.

regan[email protected]