Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Homeless Fold Up Tent City In Vancouver's Oppenheimer Park, Many Planning To Return To Streets

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 16 Oct, 2014 04:59 PM
    VANCOUVER - The day Ben DuPont walked out of jail last July, he bought a little green tent for $64 and pegged it into a Downtown Eastside park that soon sprouted a motley collection of neighbours with no place else to live.
     
    The 57-year-old, originally from Yukon, stood over the square imprint on Thursday that once held his trapper's tent, now containing only a large city trash bin.
     
    "That man has sentenced a bunch of people right back to the alleys, doorways. He hasn't got a heart," DuPont said, referring to Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson.
     
    "I was looking for something in life to fight for. I think I found it."
     
    Just a month ahead of a municipal election, the mayor became the target of many people's indignation as city workers and police officers moved in to clear out Oppenheimer Park. They were fulfilling a court-ordered eviction deadline of Wednesday at 10 p.m.
     
    A B.C. Supreme Court judge granted the injunction last week when the city claimed the local community's rights were being trampled while it pledged to make more shelters available to the campers.
     
    Over the course of Thursday, the once cheek-by-jowl tent city had, for the most part, peacefully transformed into a patchwork of dead grass and mud with only a few holdout campers.
     
    Early in the evening, police announced they had arrested five people.
     
    "A small number of campers who appeared intent on remaining in the park interfered with workers as they attempted to remove the last of the tents," said a statement issued by the Vancouver police.
     
    "Negotiations throughout the day continued with no progress. Officers were eventually required to step in to keep the peace and forced to arrest five people."
     
    Tired men in dirty clothing folded up tent poles and pushed carts overflowing with personal belongings at the same time that city workers used pitchforks and rakes to shovel the leftovers into garbage containers. Crews of fire services personnel slowly approached shelters, knocked on flimsy doors and then deflated the massive tarps as six advocates in orange T-shirts acted as observers.
     
    The park's former residents said they would figure out where to sleep when night fell.
     
    In the hours before the injunction deadline, a 69-year-old man was discovered dead inside a tent. Police later said the death wasn't suspicious.
     
    A city official said staff had transported 70 people from the camp into shelter beds the previous night and had also relocated 60 people into more permanent housing. Others were moving in with parents or partners, said Sadhu Johnston, deputy city manager.
     
    "Overall, we're really relieved that we got co-operation from the campers," Johnston said. "I think the community will be pretty excited to have their park back."
     
    The city has taken away a better understanding that it's not just housing that's needed, but a multi-pronged approach to homelessness that includes mental health and addition support, Johnston said.
     
    "The city can't do it alone," he said, repeating the mayor's call for the province to step up. "(The tent city) has confirmed the challenges we have with people living on the street."
     
    But local resident Charlotte Zesati, who said she only lives one step above those in the tents, said the forced removal made her think officials don't truly comprehend the situation.
     
    "They're not trying to provide solutions. Shelters aren't solutions, I'm sorry. They're terrifying. They're bed bug ridden. Girls are getting assaulted and raped. Men are getting assaulted and robbed," she said, tears welling in her eyes as she cast her gaze over the empty spaces and a few people huddled around a campfire.
     
    "We're so rich, this country ... and I just don't understand how people can treat other people like this.
     
    Another woman, who had a friend living in the park and who had volunteered in the camp's community kitchen for the past two weeks, said she felt the dismantling was the right conclusion.
     
    "I think it's completion. They've done what they needed to do here. A statement has been made," said Annie Cavanagh. "It's obvious to the population of Vancouver how bad the homeless situation is."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Personal Info of 15,000 People Accessed From B.C. Government Site and Databases

    Personal Info of 15,000 People Accessed From B.C. Government Site and Databases
    VICTORIA - The B.C. government is trying to notify about 15,000 people whose personal information has been illegally accessed because of a data breach on a Ministry of Forests' website and associated databases.

    Personal Info of 15,000 People Accessed From B.C. Government Site and Databases

    Warning Issued To Drug Users As 31 People In Vancouver Overdose On Potent Heroin

    Warning Issued To Drug Users As 31 People In Vancouver Overdose On Potent Heroin
    VANCOUVER - Toxic heroin has resulted in 31 overdoses in two days at Vancouver's safe injection site — believed to be a record for the facility that opened 11 years ago.

    Warning Issued To Drug Users As 31 People In Vancouver Overdose On Potent Heroin

    Weary-looking Rob Ford Casts Advance Ballot, Says He's Not Feeling Well

    Weary-looking Rob Ford Casts Advance Ballot, Says He's Not Feeling Well
    TORONTO - A weary-looking Rob Ford cast his ballot in advance polling for the municipal election Tuesday, saying he is confident his brother will be Toronto's new mayor.

    Weary-looking Rob Ford Casts Advance Ballot, Says He's Not Feeling Well

    NDP Proposes $15-a-day Child Care, With Million New Spaces, Long-term Financing

    NDP Proposes $15-a-day Child Care, With Million New Spaces, Long-term Financing
    OTTAWA - An NDP government would spend $5 billion a year to create a million daycare spaces that parents could access for no more than $15 a day, Tom Mulcair promised Tuesday.

    NDP Proposes $15-a-day Child Care, With Million New Spaces, Long-term Financing

    Cases Of Metal Found In Potatoes Rises To Five In Atlantic Canada: RCMP

    Cases Of Metal Found In Potatoes Rises To Five In Atlantic Canada: RCMP
    SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. - Police in Prince Edward Island say they have received three more reports of potatoes containing metal objects in them, bringing the total number of such cases to five over the last week.

    Cases Of Metal Found In Potatoes Rises To Five In Atlantic Canada: RCMP

    Vancouver Police To Wear Body Cameras For Disbanding Of Homeless Camp

    Vancouver Police To Wear Body Cameras For Disbanding Of Homeless Camp
    VANCOUVER - Vancouver's police force says some of its officers will be wearing video cameras during the  dismantling of a homeless camp that is facing a court-ordered eviction.

    Vancouver Police To Wear Body Cameras For Disbanding Of Homeless Camp