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Toilet brought to mayor as students aim to keep park bathrooms open for tent encampment

Memorial University students are calling on the City of St. John's to help the people living in the tent encampment in Bannerman Park.

MUN social work students take protest to city hall, disappointed by Danny Breen's unavailability

Two women holding protest signs in front of a government building.
Social work students Andrea Williams and Hannah Evely led a charge at St. John's city hall on Monday to urge the city to keep bathrooms open at Bannerman Park for people living in a tent encampment nearby. (Mike Moore/CBC)

A cold, white porcelain toilet sits on the doorstep of St. John's city hall with rusted chains wrapped around it, secured with locks. 

It's a call to action from Memorial University social work students and their professor, who want the City of St. John's to keep the bathrooms in Bannerman Park open after 8 p.m. for people living in a tent encampment behind the nearby Colonial Building. 

"The bathrooms are closed after 8 p.m., public bathrooms, so as a class we started discussions about that and were kind of really concerned that the city wasn't doing more, considering that using a bathroom is a human right," fourth-year social work student Andrea Williams told CBC News in front of city hall Monday morning.

"We're here to stand up and try to put some pressure on the city to stand up and do the right thing and get these people their inherent dignity back."

But despite the group's chants for Mayor Danny Breen to come outside echoing off the building's concrete walls, the city didn't bite. Neither Breen nor any city councillors spoke with the group Monday morning.  

After a short round of speeches from students, professor Julia Janes, federal NDP president Mary Shortall, provincial NDP Leader Jim Dinn and a formerly homeless man — who spoke about the difficulties faced by people living in the tent encampment — the group moved inside. 

About 20 people flooded the elevators inside city hall and rode up to the fourth floor, where Breen's office is. They were told by city staff that Breen was out of the office. 

A toilet surrounded by signs placed on a concrete step in front of a government building.
Memorial University social work students protested outside St. John's city hall on Monday. (Mike Moore/CBC)

"We look forward to the opportunity to speak with Mayor Breen when he's back in house. We'll come back," said Janes. 

"How does it feel to be in Mayor Breen's office without Mayor Breen? Disappointing. Incredibly disappointing that the mayor isn't here, and we're going to demand a meeting in a very short period of time, where we will all be invited to his office."

'We need you'

Just over a kilometre north at Bannerman Park, residents of the encampment knew what was happening on their behalf.

WATCH | This MUN professor explains why St. John's-operated bathrooms shouldn't have a curfew:

Why a toilet took centre stage at a protest at St. John’s city hall

1 year ago
Duration 0:57
MUN social work professor Julia Janes and students want the City of St. John’s to stop locking the bathrooms in Bannerman Park at 8 p.m. Janes says there are people living in tents nearby — amid the housing crunch — and bathrooms are a human right.

"I'm happy," said Nicole Noble, who lives in the encampment and relies on the bathroom facilities of the park — until 8 p.m.

"I go into these bathrooms and leave notes for these [city] workers every night and I tell them, 'Thank you for cleaning this up and thank you for doing your work in the park.'"

A group of people stand near a green fence with tents in the background.
People living in the tent encampment in Bannerman Park are locked out of the park's bathrooms after 8 p.m. (Curtis Hicks/CBC)

Noble said the people living in the tents have become their own community, but some have serious health problems. 

She said the bathrooms at the park also act as a bit of a safe haven for people to get away from the encampment for a few minutes. She was disappointed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau didn't meet with the collective during his visit to St. John's last week for a summit with European Union leaders. 

"If I've got to do this protest myself, and chain myself to this bathroom so it doesn't get locked, I'll do it," Noble said.

"I've got kids. We all make mistakes, all of us do. Sometimes we just need that … belief to keep going. St. John's, we need you. We need help." 

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With files from Henrike Wilhelm and Curtis Hicks

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