London

London council committee to consider tighter rules on encampment locations

A city council committee is being asked to endorse a plan with updated rules and regulations around London’s 61 homeless encampments.

There are also more recommendations for rapid closure parameters

The problem of homelessness has become so pervasive in London, Ont., that dozens of homeless colonies line the Thames Valley Parkway in the greenspaces close to downtown.
New proposed location rules for encampments in London Ont. include no significant degradation to the natural environment, open or unsafe fires or using the encampment to store stolen equipment. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

A city council committee is being asked to endorse a plan with updated rules and regulations around London's 61 homeless encampments. 

The Strategic Priorities and Policy Committee is set to discuss a newly proposed community encampment response plan from London's Health and Homelessness Whole of Community System Response. It includes suggestions on rules around health and safety, locations and protocols for rapid forced closures.  

"Preventing injury, illness, and loss of life for people living in encampments and people that live or work near encampments is critically important," reads the report. 

"While even a single tent can present risks to be addressed, anytime there is a concentration of tents in a single space, the risk factors are even greater. More needs to be done in a co-ordinated fashion across various entities to define risks, inspect hazards, and offer plans to address and mitigate concerns."  

The plan recommends health and safety representatives visiting encampments assess them for risks such as: 

  • Open fires or unsafe fires 
  • Declining health and potential spread of infectious diseases 
  • Using the encampment for storing stolen equipment 
  • Unsafely disrupting pedestrian, bicycle or motor vehicle traffic 
  • Significant degradation of the natural environment (e.g., chopping down trees) 
  • Acts of violence causing serious bodily harm between or to occupants
  • Human trafficking or exploitative sex work at the encampment 
  • Drug manufacturing or drug dealing out of the encampment 

If the health and safety team deems the encampment high risk, a rapid forced closure will be carried out by the Co-ordinated Informed Response by-law team. The report defines "rapid" as a closure within no more than 24 hours, except for when there are serious and health safety concerns that could place people at risk without a timely response. 

New rules on locations are calling for encampments to not be: 

  • On or within 50 metres of an elementary school or children daycare centre
  • On or within 50 metres of a playground, pool, waterpark, or any spray pad 
  • Within 10 metres of any private property line 
  • On or within 5 metres of any transit stop 
  • On any fenced-in, off-leash dog area 
  • On any cemetery 
  • On or within any entrance, exit, or a doorway to a building or structure  

There are currently 120 individuals and 15 pets residing in London's encampments, according to an  additional report going to the committee called The Basic Needs Response Plan. At least 57 of those people, and 13 of those pets, reside in 24 encampments with service depot locations

"Through the co-ordination of community efforts, one designated and several mobile support depots will be maintained across the community to provide access to basic needs," reads the plan. 

The report goes to committee Tuesday.