A day in the life at Vancouver's Oppenheimer Park homeless camp
'Red' says he hasn't had his own place for decades
In the heart of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, at least 100 people are living in tents at Oppenheimer Park located between Powell and Cordova streets, two blocks east of Main Street.
Each resident of the park has a unique story about how they ended up homeless and what they plan to do next. This is a day in the life of one of these residents, 51-year-old Stephen James Robinson who goes by the name "Red."
It's 9 a.m. and Red wakes up in his "zone" — which consists of two tents and all his belongings — to the sounds of garbage trucks and angry neighbours.
Every day, workers from the city's Transient Crew along with members of the fire department accompanied by members of the Vancouver Police Department come to the park to inspect the park for fire hazards.
On Thursdays, the inspection is thorough. They arrive with garbage trucks and pickup trucks and spend hours throwing away any items that are deemed a fire hazard or simply unattended.
According to Fiona York, coordinator and administrator for the Carnegie Community Action Project, weekly city inspections cost the city over $100,000. She questions why this money isn't spent creating housing.
Red has lived in Oppenheimer Park for two months, but has been homeless off and on since he was 35 years old. Over the years, Red has come to know many of the city workers and developed a good rapport with them. Even so, he knows he must clean up his tent to avoid having everything taken away.
Red says he doesn't like living in the park but that he feels he has no choice at the moment. He has been homeless for so long that "sometimes it feels weird to be inside."
Like many people living in the park and on the streets in Vancouver, Red says there isn't a single factor that led to his current circumstances. He says it has been a combination of many events including an old hip injury and a home invasion. But now that he is here, he is trying to make the best of it.
Even so, Red finds joy in the little things. As he cleans up his tent he finds a piece of missing jewelry and gets excited at the discovery that it was not lost forever.
He also comes across a grasshopper and spends some time admiring the little creature.
Red finds joy in what he calls "urban recovery" which involves tidying pretty much any city space he comes across. His favourite piece of urban recovery is his garden.
Red adds more items to the garden as he awaits inspection. It takes several hours for the city workers to get to his tent and when they do they greet him by name.
Once the workers arrive, they inspect Red's area and throw away one mattress. Overall, Red is pleased that he passed inspection with flying colours due to his three-hour clean-up.
It's 1 p.m. and the inspection is over so Red can leave his tent to go get lunch.
On the way to lunch, Red stops for a snack at a blackberry bush on the side of the street. He says he stops here every day to eat berries and also do a bit of urban recovery. There is dead brush on the ground that he clears to reveal soil beneath.
Across the street from the berries is the Evelyn Saller Centre on Alexander Street where Red enjoys most of his meals. Conveniently for Red, most of the places he needs to go today are within a few blocks from each other.
In the cafeteria at the Evelyn Saller Centre, meals are only $2. Today's lunch features burritos with rice, sour cream, salsa, a fruit cup, slaw, soup, coffee, apple juice and water. The cost of the food is charged to his account on file that is connected to his disability funds. This allows Red to come here for breakfast, lunch, and dinner most days (when he isn't watching his tent).
After lunch, Red visits the Carnegie Centre Outreach where he picks up a copy of his Canadian citizenship, ID that he needs in order to apply for assistance such as housing services.
Red takes this document over to Orange Hall on East Hastings Street to check in on his housing placement and charge his electronics.
As Red uses the outlet in the lounge to charge his electronics, Julie Anderson, a team assistant at Orange Hall, comes to pay a visit. Julie and Red first met while playing on the same rugby team have known each other for over 30 years.
When asked where Red is on the housing "list," Anderson explains that's a common misconception. There is actually a sophisticated database that lists each person's individual needs and how those might be best paired with available housing.
When asked if she has any advice for people struggling with homelessness, she urges people to get connected to resources like Orange Hall. If they don't, they're invisible to helping agencies and therefore more vulnerable.
Red says goodbye to Anderson and heads north. He has decided he needs an escape from the streets so he heads to Crab Park.
He says he once lived on the beach under an umbrella for six weeks. During that time he would clean away the large rocks to reveal the beach sand underneath — some of his proudest urban recovery work.
After the beach, Red will go back to the Evelyn Saller Centre. He has to arrive before 5:50 p.m. when the doors close. There, Red will have dinner and then enjoy some TV and indoor activities such as bingo.
At 11 p.m., when the centre closes, he'll head back to his home in Oppenheimer Park.
As Red waves goodbye, he says he would like the public not to be afraid to come visit him in Oppenheimer Park and say hello.