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Furey creates task force to address homelessness, as tent city wakes up to snow

The Newfoundland and Labrador government has announced a new task force to find solutions for the province's ongoing homelessness problem.

Winter sets in at Bannerman Park encampment

A group of people stand in front of a microphone in a government office.
The Newfoundland and Labrador government on Thursday announced a new task force to address homelessness and a tent city in St. John's. (Sarah Antle/CBC)

The Newfoundland and Labrador government has announced a new task force on homelessness, amid complaints the province is not doing enough to halt a crisis that includes a tent encampment in a prominent St. John's park. 

Premier Andrew Furey, at a news conference Thursday afternoon to announce the task force, said it will have provincial and municipal government representation, and include community groups.

"There was unanimous recognition that there is no easy, quick solution to any of the complicated problems that exist. But the only path forward is in working together," he said.

The announcement comes after almost two months of people sleeping in tents outside Confederation Building and relocating to the Colonial Building in downtown St. John's. Furey said the task force will also address acute issues within the encampment.

Opposition leader Tony Wakeham says action should have been taken three months ago. While the short-term solution would be to get everyone indoors, he said, long-term solutions are needed.

"What we should be doing is individually meeting with the people that are there in the tent city and seeing if we can find accommodations that works for them individually," he said. 

"[A] task force may sound like a great idea because it sounds like they're doing something.… If they put all this effort in, as they describe, why do we stand here today and not be able to give anybody a solution?" 

Wakeham said people living in tents want the same things as any other person: a place to sleep, a place to cook a meal, and a place to use the bathroom.

A man with white hair in a grey suit stands in front of a mic.
NDP Leader Jim Dinn says it shouldn't take a task force to figure out what what people who are homeless need. (Katie Breen/CBC)

NDP Leader Jim Dinn said it doesn't take a task force to find out what the problems are, just talking to the people living in the camp.

"It doesn't take a whole lot to talk to people and find out what the issues are that could have been done. I've done it, and they're pretty articulate in outlining their concerns."

"We just need the solutions and the willpower to implement them," he said.

At the news conference, Paul Davis, executive director of the Gathering Place, a St. John's organization that helps people struggling with homelessness, said there were three vacant beds in the facility last night. But Dinn said there are valid reasons for people at the camp to forgo beds at the available facilities.

"Many of them fear for their safety and their own recovery from addictions and mental health by going into some of the shelters." 

Some residents of the tent encampment sought shelter ahead of Wednesday's snowfall warning, but about 10 people stayed there overnight. 

Sleeping in the snow

Tents covered in snow.
The encampment was covered in snow Thursday morning after the first major snowfall of the season. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

At eight o'clock Wednesday morning, Laurel Huget, a volunteer with Tent City For Change — a group of volunteers supporting people living in the encampment — was handing out coffee and cigarettes to anyone who stayed. 

"A bunch of folks stayed in the hot tents, like, all bundled up together," she said. "They had the propane stove going and they seemed reasonably warm, in fairly good spirits. We brought some cigarettes down. People were pleased."

And though the storm was less severe than forecast on the Avalon Peninsula, the night still brought blustery wind and blowing snow. 

Tents, burnt-ut fire pits, seating areas and items left outside were all covered in snow Wednesday morning. 

Tables had been knocked over in the wind, and clothes and towels hung over the fence were frozen. 

WATCH | Some Bannerman Park tent encampment residents feel the first real wrath of winter, while supporters blast the city for bathroom closures: 

Some tent encampment residents hunker down during fierce winter conditions at Bannerman Park

12 months ago
Duration 2:43
While some people sought refuge at emergency shelters ahead of howling winds and blowing snow, about 10 people stayed put at the tent city in Bannerman Park in St. John’s. Laura Huguet, who says she is a supporter of the people living in the tents, speaks to St. John’s Morning Show reporter Darrell Roberts about how some people are still fuming about the city-run washrooms in the park being closed permanently.

Compounded with the weather, the encampment saw another setback with the closure of the public bathroom at Bannerman Park on Wednesday. 

The bathrooms are the only accessible facilities near the encampment and had been open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily, but the City of St. John's announced Wednesday they'd be closed until further notice.

Huget said her reaction was one of "white hot rage."

"We showed up two days ago, we plunked a toilet and chains on city hall property and asked the mayor to move the 12-hour window to a 24-window and for the bathroom openings. And then he just shut them down completely."

The City of St. John's cited vandalism and staff safety as reasons for the closure, but Huget said she has worked in shelters in the past and has cleaned up areas with vandalism and drug use.

A woman with long blond hair wearing a coat and hat looks into the distance.
Laurel Huget of Tent City For Change, which is supporting people living in the encampment, says she's furious the City of St. John's closed the bathrooms in nearby Bannerman Park. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

"We're all well equipped to do so and [we're] dealing with those things," she said. All that's needed is some training and protective equipment, she said.

"It's perfectly safe. It's perfectly reasonable. I wholeheartedly support workers, our right to refuse unsafe work. But it's not unsafe work if you are well equipped. And if those workers couldn't do it, you can contract that out. You could probably ask us to do it. We probably would have done it too."

She said useable bathrooms are a key way in maintaining dignity for people living in the area. 

"We're furious," she said. 

St. John's Mayor Danny Breen said the city is looking at options for alternative bathroom options. Wakeham suggested providing security or more frequent bathroom cleaning, while Dinn said the Colonial Building could be staffed for people to use the facilities there.

Wakeham said that if there needs to be security or more frequent cleaning of the bathrooms for them to stay open, that's the necessary steps. 

Dinn said that the Colonial Building could be staffed and used.

Huget said Breen hasn't been down to talk with the camp's residents or supporters, nor have any of the city councillors. If they had, she said, they would see volunteers are already dealing with dump runs, including bringing in sharps containers for safe needle disposal.

Until there is shelter for all of the camp's residents, said Huget, her group will be supporting them. 

"Folks are camping here because it's a survival need and they're taking care of each other," she said. "It's a community, but ultimately it's a protest, it's a political movement and resident protesters are asking for safe, affordable, accessible housing for all."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sarah Antle

Journalist

Sarah Antle is a journalist working with CBC in the St. John's bureau.

With Files from The St. John's Morning Show

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