Vancouver, BC (unceded Coast Salish Territories) – Today, the BC Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) met with the Minister of Housing of British Colombia, the Honourable Ravi Kahlon, to issue five crucial calls to action. The BCCLA is deeply concerned about the Province’s recent and ongoing support of municipal evictions in Vancouver on Hastings Street and in Abbotsford at Lonzo Park (the “Evictions”). These Evictions took place illegally, without satisfying legal requirements of procedural fairness and ensuring the availability of alternative accessible and dignified housing for encampment residents. Such forced evictions or decampments are not only inhumane but disregard established legal precedent, violate international human rights law, and grossly infringe on encampment residents’ Charter rights. We are also deeply concerned regarding the Minister’s lack of meaningful consultation with those individuals and grassroots organizations with lived experience of homelessness.
The Minister and the Province must take urgent steps to prevent the perpetuation of these violations during the dire housing crisis in our Province and to hold municipalities accountable to constitutional and human rights law prior to initiating any further evictions:
(1) The Province must hold municipalities accountable to the rule of law
The BCCLA calls upon the Minster of Housing and the Province to take a public position that municipal governments must remain accountable to the rule of law and be transparent in their decision-making when initiating evictions. The Province must issue a moratorium or a binding requirement that no further decampments can occur until all legal requirements are transparently met and the other four calls to action are satisfied.
(2) The Province must be transparent regarding the availability of supportive housing
The BCCLA calls upon the Minster of Housing and the Province to provide the public with accurate and updated information regarding present-day net social housing supply, including current vacancies, and the clear distinction between units which are temporary shelters or are supportive housing. Decampments cannot be justified by future housing creation given the ongoing net loss of supportive housing.
(3) The Province must ensure that human rights and dignity in living conditions are met in encampments and supportive housing
The BCCLA calls upon the Minster of Housing and the Province to ensure municipalities provide basic and essential sanitation and electrical services on the street or in encampments to respect the safety, dignity, and human rights of residents. It is crucial that the Province also commit to ensuring that tenancy rights are protected in supportive housing.
(4) The Province must urgently plan and create housing for the upcoming winter
The BCCLA calls upon the Minster of Housing and the Province to take proactive, urgent, and collaborative steps to create a transparent and realistic plan for creating new shelter and housing spaces for the upcoming winter.
(5) The Province must meaningfully listen to and collaborate with those with lived experience
The status quo is not working. The BCCLA calls upon the Minster of Housing and the Province to listen and collaborate, meaningfully and actively, with people with lived experience of homelessness and precarious housing to determine strategies for adequate, accessible, and affordable housing, and to address systemic housing issues.
Media contact:
To request an interview with Ga Grant, BCCLA Litigation Staff Counsel, please contact [email protected]
-30-