Homeless set up camp near closed Vancouver shelter
The 36-bed Homeless Emergency Action Team (HEAT) shelter at 1435 Granville St. was closed at the end of June following weeks of protests by area residents.
The shelter — and another like it on Howe Street, which remains open — led to a plague of open drug use and dealing, public urination and defecation, prostitution and public sex, trespassing, theft, aggressive panhandling and harassment outside their homes, residents complained.
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson and Housing and Social Development Minister Rich Coleman said B.C. Housing would move as many people as possible into new accommodations.
However, they didn't count on a handful of people who decided they didn't want to leave the neighbourhood. They have set up a makeshift camp with sleeping bags, mattresses and lawn chairs across the street from the former shelter and say they won't leave unless it is re-opened or a new location is found.
"If that shelter closes we are staying here," one resident said. "There is no way — we won't go to the Downtown Eastside. How can they expect people to get clean when they go to an area like that?"
Robertson said Tuesday the city is working on the problem.
"There certainly have been people reluctant to leave who were using the Granville shelter and the Howe shelter continues to be overflowing. We're working with the shelter users and operators to reduce the impact."