Several residents took to Âé¶čAV City Hall to demostrate, once again.
This time, locals gathered to support those who are currently experiencing homelessness.
Local broadcaster Lisa Redl spoke at the rally.
âWe have to find a solution right now,â Redl said. âRegardless of what the city is doing, we have to figure out how to get these people warm right now.â
Last week the City of Âé¶čAV relocated those camping on Leon Avenue to two parks at the north-end of downtown.
According to new rules set out by the city, those camped in the new locations are not allowed to stay the entire day and can only stay at the two sites between 7 p.m. and 9 a.m.
Several people who stayed at the new camp set up by the Âé¶čAV Curling Club, said they now have no where to go during the day to keep warm, which is worse than staying on Leon Avenue where they could stay warm in their tents.
Redl stated that those camped at Recreation Avenue are demanding additional warming tents be brought to the area to give them a warm place to sleep.
âI get that there are regulations, but these are human beings too. These are somebodyâs son, somebodyâs daughter,â she said.
READ MORE: Âé¶čAV homelessness count shows more people without shelter
READ MORE: Province plans to open shelter for West Âé¶čAV homeless in 2020
Others attending the rally have experienced homelessness in the past and came to show their support.
âWe were also homeless⊠and this is just inhumane. I was at the camp this morning handing out breakfast. Sometimes, itâs as easy as that,â one said.
Another mentioned how easily people can fall through the cracks and end up on the streets.
âYou donât pay your rent once and you get evicted quickly, and thatâs what weâre seeing here. Weâve elected a mayor who ran on a pro-helping the homeless on a Journey Home strategy against someone who had a tough love approach. He won basically on that and weâre just not seeing action,â another resident said.
Resident Gail Hodgson said, the city should consider the issue as an emergency.
âThe city has procedures for emergencies like when thereâs forest fires - they open up buildings with cots, water, supplies. This is an emergency too,â Hodgson said.
âIâd like to see a building opened up to these people. Theyâre suffering already and Iâve had enough.â
She said she also understood how Knox Mountain neighbourhood residents would be unhappy with having those experiencing homelessness sheltering in a popular park.
âI feel sorry for them as well. If I lived there and that happened near me and I had kids, and what with some of the homeless folk having addiction and the potential dangers, I feel sorry for them too. Itâs a terrible situation for everybody.â
But, she pointed out that if the city could put security measures for an outdoor camp, they can do that in an indoor setting too.
âWhat the city has done is put up that camp at Recreation (Avenue) and theyâre manning it with security. Well, can they do that in a building?â
In all, Redl said the gathering at city hall wasnât meant to be a protest, but a call out and a challenge for the city to act soon before weather conditions get worse.
READ MORE: Knox Mountain, north end Âé¶čAV residents gather to petition city over homeless camp relocation
READ MORE: Knox Mountain residents hold protest over homeless camp move
twila.amato@blackpress.ca
Like us on and follow us on .

