Tuesday, May 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

New housing for homeless announced for Vancouver

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2020 10:09 PM
  • New housing for homeless announced for Vancouver

The B.C. government and City of Vancouver are partnering to build 450 new supportive homes for people experiencing homelessness.

Housing Minister Selina Robinson and Mayor Kennedy Stewart announced plans to build 98 temporary modular homes just a few blocks from Strathcona Park where a homeless encampment has been growing.

Another 350 units of permanent supportive housing are planned for other city-owned lands with locations to be announced in the next few months.

The goal is to open the temporary units next spring pending a public information session, and the units will remain in place for about five years with an option to renew the lease for another five.

Stewart says the COVID-19 crisis and physical distancing measures have reduced space in places like shelters, dealing another blow to some of the city's most vulnerable people.

He says the city plans to move people camping at Strathcona Park into housing in a similar process as was undertaken at Oppenheimer Park.

"We started 2020 with a housing and homelessness crisis that has been exacerbated by an overdose crisis due to the poisoned drug supply. COVID-19 has made things much more difficult," Stewart says.

"These are tough times for everyone but especially those with the fewest resources."

Robinson says the province has experienced a housing affordability crisis for years, but the growth rate of homelessness had begun to slow until the pandemic struck.

"The importance of housing has become even clearer in the last few months," she says.

Robinson says the new units are part of the province's plan to provide both immediate and long-term solutions that include wraparound services like health, wellness and employment support.

Once open, each site will be managed by a non-profit housing operator who will be present full time, the government says in a news release.

The new units are among about 1,000 supportive homes opened in the city as part of a provincial housing plan since 2017.

MORE National ARTICLES

N.S. mass shooting: media outlets challenge judge

N.S. mass shooting: media outlets challenge judge
David Coles submitted an application today for a judicial review of decisions Judge Laurel Halfpenny-MacQuarrie made last month, arguing she had exceeded her jurisdiction.

N.S. mass shooting: media outlets challenge judge

Trudeau denounces Macdonald statue vandalism

Trudeau denounces Macdonald statue vandalism
The Macdonald statue was unbolted, toppled and sprayed with graffiti on Saturday at the end of a protest demanding cities cut police budgets.

Trudeau denounces Macdonald statue vandalism

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter
Deborah Doonanco, who is 58, was initially found guilty of second-degree murder, arson and interfering with human remains after Kevin Feland's body was found in her home in Glendon, Alta., in May 2014.

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes
The fact that glaciers around the world are shrinking due to climate change is well-established. What hasn't been so well studied is where all that water is going.

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M
A federal spending watchdog says a program aiming to providing rent relief to small and medium-sized businesses will cost just under $1 billion this fiscal year.

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again
Ocean Wise, the non-profit organization that operates the aquarium, says in a news release the decision was made in response to one of the most financially challenging times in its 64-year history.

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again