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Victoria Greens Newsletter #1, October 20th

October 20th, 2008 ~ No Comments

 

Victoria Greens Get Victoria Labour Council Endorsement
Read more to find out this week’s schedule of events!Dear friends and supporters,We’re pleased to announce that this week both Philippe Lucas and Sonya Chandler received the endorsement of the Victoria Labour Council for their City Council bid.  As strong supporters of workers rights, keeping water and sewage public, and fair wages, both candidates were pleased with this show of support from the VLC.

In other news, our lawn signs are in!  If you’d like a handsome campaign sign for your front lawn or window please contact our new Office Manager Pam Purri at: 250-812-7486, or send an email to pamela_punni@hotmail.com, and we’ll arrange to drop one off for you.

Otherwise, just pop into the Victoria Greens Office at 959 Fort St. between 12-5pm to check out the office and to pick one up.

Here’s brief schedule of All-Candidate meetings and events where you can come out to support Philippe and Sonya this week:

Tuesday the 21st:
1. Values-Based Business Association All-Candidates Meeting8:30am Heron Rock Bistro
Corner of Crofton and Simcoe

2. Oaklands All-Candidates Meeting
7pm Oaklands Community Center
2827 Belmont Ave.

Wednesday the 22nd:
Committee to End Homelessness All Candidates Meeting
7pm, St. Johns the Divine Church, Quadra and Cormorant St.
Hosted by Jodie Paterson

Saturday the 25th
WC2 Rally for Old Growth Forests
11:30am Centennial Square
12:30am at Legislature

For a more complete listing of events, please check the campaign calendar at: www.vicgreens.com
For more information on the campaign or to find out how to help or make a donation, please contact Pam at 250-812-7486, or go to www.vicgreens.com

Thanks for all of the help and support; now lets work together for a better Victoria!
Sonya Chandler & Philippe Lucas
Your municipal Green Team

P.S.  There has been some understandable confusion and consternation about the recent court decision on homelessness, so we’ve included a good explanation of the reasoning behind this ruling from local lawyer David Mulroney that appeared in the October 18th edition of the Times Colonist.

The homeless are our own refugees

Homeless people are pitching tents in our parks. Why this is happening? On Oct. 15, as most Canadians were waking up to the results of the federal election, far too many homeless Canadians were waking up on our streets, in alleyways, under bridges and in our parks.

Probably a few did not wake up at all.

The election results might have overshadowed the results of a three-year battle fought by lawyers Irene Faulkner and Catherine Boies Parker on behalf of a handful of Victoria homeless people. They have obtained a ruling that might do more to protect homeless people than anyone can imagine.

By allowing temporary shelters in our parks, this case will create a highly visible barometer of the level of poverty, dislocation and despair in our cities.

No longer will these problems be hidden under bridges and in back alleys. The ability of the police to roust these people from public view and confiscate their goods will be restrained.

The case is complex, and some will not like it, but it is worth understanding.

The judge did not decide that homeless people have the right to live in our parks. Madame Justice Carol Ross of the B.C. Supreme Court did not decide the government must provide shelter or refuge for homeless people.

She held that a city bylaw, which had the effect of prohibiting homeless people from erecting temporary shelter in parks, violated the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, because enforcement of the bylaw deprived homeless people of life, liberty and security of the person.

How did she get to such a messy result? She found, based on expert reports, testimony of witnesses and the Mayor’s Task Force Report on Homelessness, that Victoria had more than 1,000 homeless.

We had only 104 shelter beds, expanding to 326 beds in extreme weather conditions. Hundreds of homeless people are having to sleep in public spaces in the city every night.

Some of the homeless are children under 16, and young people. Victoria’s shelters do not accept children. Forty per cent of the homeless suffer from diagnosable mental illness. Fifty per cent have problematic substance abuse. Twenty-five per cent of the homeless suffer from both mental illness and substance abuse combined.

Not surprisingly, many homeless, when they have been able to get into the crowded shelters, felt unsafe or afraid. There were fights, violence, thefts and disease. These frightening and unsafe conditions are in spite of the wonderful and tireless efforts of many workers and volunteers.

The city bylaw prohibited taking up temporary abode overnight in parks, which the city interpreted as using a tent, stringing a tarp or using a cardboard box or other structure.

Expert testimony established that lack of such rudimentary shelters was causing severe adverse health impacts. These included extremes from sunburn and heat stroke in summer to hypothermia in winter. Lack of adequate sleep was causing or aggravating other illnesses, such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity, depression and other injuries, as well as generally reducing capacity to function.

Of course, these problems are compounded by the near impossibility of maintaining good health behaviours while homeless, even if mentally sound and non-addicted.

For some of these people, taking shelter under their own tarp or in a small tent will be the difference between life and death, health or illness, safety or risk of violence and abuse.

Any bylaw which would force these people into the open and toward death, illness or danger could not stand against the charter. Not when there is no safe and reliable alternative.

So long as our society does not provide even rudimentary safe shelter for these people, or at least keep them from becoming ill or from dying due to lack of shelter, they cannot be prohibited from looking after themselves by use of a temporary tent or tarp.

That is all they were awarded. Our government is simply not allowed to interfere with this last-ditch attempt to survive and stay healthy. If we give them safe places to go, they will not be allowed to tent in their and our parks. If we draft more bylaws trying to drive them from our parks without giving them safe places to go, we will be violating their rights to life, liberty and security of the person.

We must protect our parks, but not at the expense of these peoples’ lives.

These are our society’s refugees. Let’s at least start with striving to reach the standards of a basic refugee camp. Surely, that will be cleaner, more orderly, more compassionate and more cost effective than what we are doing now.

Many of the homeless do not have a mirror to look into each morning. We do.

Until we give them a place to go, we will have to face them and ourselves each day.

With tough times ahead, there will be more of them. We must judge ourselves and our society by how we treat them.

Perhaps we can judge our mayor and candidates by whether they will spend our money on legal fees appealing this well-reasoned decision, or spend it on rudimentary safe shelter for the homeless.

David Mulroney is a Victoria lawyer.

Because you care about:

  • A safe and vibrant downtown core
  • Effective solutions for affordable housing and homelessness
  • Good value for money on major projects like sewage treatment
  • Living in a city that reaches its full social, economic and environmental potential
  • Food Security and our local economy

                   JUST VOTE GREEN!!

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