Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Homeless Man Spends Final Dying Hours Inside Tim Hortons

The Canadian Press, 06 Jun, 2018 11:45 AM
    VANCOUVER — The death of an ill senior who lived inside a 24-hour Tim Hortons is drawing new attention to Vancouver's housing crisis and raising questions about health supports for homeless people.
     
     
    Friends say the man in his 70s, who they knew only as Ted, was a kind and easygoing guy who began sleeping, eating and spending all his time in the coffee shop about 10 years ago. He had cancer and appeared to be hallucinating the day before he died on May 31, said his friend John Bingham.
     
     
    "He looked pretty rough," said Bingham, who sleeps outside the Tim Hortons, adding he had never seen Ted hallucinate in the decade he'd known him.
     
     
    "I think he was getting ready to go, to pass on. ... He's saying things that he never said before."
     
     
    Staff at the Tim Hortons became concerned about the man's health and called 911 for assistance, the company said in a statement. It's reviewing the details of the incident, but restaurant owners and their teams have full discretion to take any steps necessary to help guests who need medical assistance, it said.
     
     
    "Like other members of the community, we were saddened to hear this news. The individual was a regular at the restaurant and will be missed," the statement said.
     
     
    Two ambulances responded to a report of a cardiac arrest at the coffee shop at 4 a.m., said Amy Robertson, a communications officer with British Columbia Emergency Health Services. Paramedics performed CPR until 4:45 a.m., when he was transported to hospital in critical condition, she said.
     
     
    The BC Coroners Service said it was aware of a death involving a man who was transported to hospital after being found at a Tim Hortons. But it only investigates sudden and unexpected deaths, not those of natural causes.
     
     
    Ted was a retired low-wage worker who struggled to make ends meet on a basic government pension, said Judy Graves, an advocate for the homeless.
     
     
    "He was very, very poor. He couldn't afford housing. He was, like most of us would be, afraid to go into the Downtown Eastside where most of the shelters are," she said. "He decided to maintain his dignity by living as much as he possibly could at Tim Hortons."
     
     
    It's inexpensive to stay in 24-hour restaurants over long periods of time, and possible to blend in with other customers, which was important to him, she said.  
     
     
    Graves said Ted's cancer was terminal but the health care system isn't set up to help the homeless. They have no home in which to recuperate after they're discharged, she said.
     
     
    "I'm nothing but grateful to that Tim Hortons that they actually have let Ted rest there," she said. "They definitely added to his survival. He would not have survived for so long had he been living outside."
     
     
    Ted was a happy and funny person who loved coffee and cigarettes, and often chatted with customers who passed by his table, Bingham said.
     
     
    Bingham was sleeping outside when the paramedics arrived at 4 a.m. There was a lot of commotion, and he heard a paramedic say Ted had suffered a heart attack, but he decided against going inside to see his friend.
     
     
    "I just wanted to have a memory of him when he was still alive," he said. "He was a good character. A good person. He was a grumpy-looking guy but he was a really good guy."
     
     
    Bingham, 50, said he's been sleeping outside the Tim Horton's for 20 years. He urged people in Vancouver to show more empathy to the city's homeless population.
     
     
    "They should know that they're one paycheque away from being out here, too. They should put their brakes on and take a look at reality," he said.
     
     
    "Because when it hits you, that's when you realize, maybe you should have been different, maybe you should have done things different. But people don't usually do that until it happens."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dalhousie Student Union Says Women Of Colour Are Under Attack, Issues 10 Demands

    Dalhousie Student Union Says Women Of Colour Are Under Attack, Issues 10 Demands
    Masuma Khan, a Muslim student leader who wears a hijab, and Kati George-Jim, an Indigenous student and member of Dalhousie's board of governors, have both been involved in high-profile disputes with the university's administration.

    Dalhousie Student Union Says Women Of Colour Are Under Attack, Issues 10 Demands

    Canada To Admit 340,000 Immigrants A Year By 2020 Under New Three-Year Plan

    Canada To Admit 340,000 Immigrants A Year By 2020 Under New Three-Year Plan
    OTTAWA — The federal government sought Wednesday to introduce more stability into Canada's immigration system by introducing a plan that sets out a gradual rise in admissions over the next three years.

    Canada To Admit 340,000 Immigrants A Year By 2020 Under New Three-Year Plan

    Ballet Victoria Cuts Ties With Choreographer Facing Nude Photo Allegations

    Ballet Victoria Cuts Ties With Choreographer Facing Nude Photo Allegations
    VANCOUVER — Ballet Victoria has cut ties with a choreographer after renewed media attention to allegations that he took nude photographs of underage dancers in the 1980s and 1990s.

    Ballet Victoria Cuts Ties With Choreographer Facing Nude Photo Allegations

    Remains Found On B.C. Farm Property Identified As Missing Woman Traci Genereaux

    Remains Found On B.C. Farm Property Identified As Missing Woman Traci Genereaux
    SALMON ARM , B.C. — Human remains found at a farm where RCMP have been conducting extensive searches have been identified as those of one of several women who have gone missing in British Columbia's north Okanagan.

    Remains Found On B.C. Farm Property Identified As Missing Woman Traci Genereaux

    US Won't Tolerate Pakistan Providing Safe Havens To Terrorists: Nikki Haley

    US Won't Tolerate Pakistan Providing Safe Havens To Terrorists: Nikki Haley
    "America's overriding interest in Afghanistan and throughout South Asia are to eliminate the terrorist safe havens that threaten US and to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists," Nikki Haley said.

    US Won't Tolerate Pakistan Providing Safe Havens To Terrorists: Nikki Haley

    After 10 Years In US Prison, Indian Man Rearrested Over Threat To Public Safety

    After 10 Years In US Prison, Indian Man Rearrested Over Threat To Public Safety
    Jerald Peter Dsouza was arrested after he was released from a private jail where he served sentence for using the internet to induce a minor to engage in criminal sexual activity.

    After 10 Years In US Prison, Indian Man Rearrested Over Threat To Public Safety