By Gilles Cyrenne with Amy Romer, Local Journalism Initiative Reporters - Megaphone Magazine
During the recent Heart of the City Festival, the Carnegie Housing Project and DTES SRO Collaborative organized a town hall meeting to raise awareness of a motion brought forward by Vancouver City Council called B次元官网网址淯plifting the DTES and Building Inclusive Communities that Work for All Residents.B次元官网网址
The motion includes the possibility of changing the unique zoning of the Downtown Eastside Oppenheimer District (DEOD), and the social housing definition in the Downtown Eastside (DTES), which critics say would further exclude low-income people from new social housing.
The town hall, titled B次元官网网址淯plifting or Gentrifying the DTES?,B次元官网网址 saw 130 people in attendance and a panel that included anti-poverty advocates, politicians and academics. The central question the panel explored was: is this a motion for B次元官网网址渦pliftingB次元官网网址 the DTES, or a motion for gentrification by another name?
The DEOD B次元官网网址 a small six-by-four block corner of the DTES which centres Oppenheimer Park B次元官网网址 is unique as it is zoned differently from other parts of the city. It has its own Official Development Plan (ODP), which emphasizes maintaining affordability and prioritizing social housing. Any idea of condo development in the DTES, therefore, is a contentious one.
People in the DTES want to protect their community as an affordable place to live and are opposed to a change in bylaws that could pave the way for market-value highrise rentals. The city hasnB次元官网网址檛 B次元官网网址 yet B次元官网网址 changed the existing bylaws, but they are up for review. There will be B次元官网网址渟takeholder consultB次元官网网址 with select groups, though not necessarily with the community, until a rezoning happens in early 2025.
Vancouver Coun. Rebecca Bligh is navigating a challenging path, working with a council under serious pressure from developers. SheB次元官网网址檚 tasked with balancing the concerns of a vocal community with the need to bring a balance of housing types to the area.
During the panel, she highlighted the complexities of B次元官网网址渇ostering collaboration between higher orders of governments to address the pressing need for housing.B次元官网网址
One of the most pressing needs for housing is for those who are homeless.
According to the 2023 Homeless Count in Greater Vancouver, 2,420 people identified as homeless, a 16-per-cent increase over 2020. One-fifth of homeless people are seniors and one-third identify as Indigenous, despite making up less than two per cent of the population, according to Statistics Canada.
A homeless citizenB次元官网网址檚 life expectancy is about half that of a housed B.C. resident. Unhoused people face a wide range of health problems associated with poor living conditions, such as mental illness, foot rot, seizures, respiratory diseases and dental problems, but they frequently report their needs are overlooked.
For those suffering from trauma, becoming unhoused multiplies their distress and can accelerate their descent into substance use. In January 2024, Megaphone reported that such decline is B次元官网网址渟tructural or systemicB次元官网网址 the lack of quality jobs, inequality, climate disruptions, and economic and health crises, among other issues, lead a person into poverty and homelessness. When housing becomes unaffordable, including in single-room occupancy hotels B次元官网网址 often the last stop before homelessness B次元官网网址 developers and landlords have the power to create conditions that turn streets into tent cities.
During his land acknowledgement at the town hall, Aboriginal Front Door Society President Norm Leech, who has ancestry in the TB次元官网网址檌tB次元官网网址檘B次元官网网址檈t community of the StB次元官网网址檃tB次元官网网址檌mc Nation wondered why so many people like to talk about the Downtown Eastside.
B次元官网网址淓ven Snoop Dogg likes to tweet about the DTES,B次元官网网址 he said. B次元官网网址淚tB次元官网网址檚 because itB次元官网网址檚 the end of the road, people end up hereB次元官网网址 We are the result of people making money and pushing poor people into smaller and smaller places. We are survivors.B次元官网网址
After the meeting, Leech told Megaphone that societyB次元官网网址檚 relationship with the land is important.
B次元官网网址淚t determines our relationships with one another, with Creator, and with the entire Universe,B次元官网网址 he said. B次元官网网址淲e need to see land not as property but as our relative, our ancestor, our Mother.B次元官网网址
Developed in 2014, The City of VancouverB次元官网网址檚 DTES Area Plan has worked to protect the community from high-end condo development. Jean Swanson, long-time anti-poverty advocate and former Vancouver city councillor, noted that since the city made the DEOD a no-condo zone, itB次元官网网址檚 seen only two market rental buildings developed, each with 60 per cent social housing units. As for social housing buildings in the DEOD, 22 have been either built, acquired or are in process, with 2,251 units of social housing, of which 988 will be at the welfare shelter rate.
No-condo zoning, like that of the DEOD, keeps property values down and makes it affordable for government and social agencies to purchase and build housing for low-income citizens, but developers are casting predatory eyes on the community. Changes in zoning bylaws that would allow highrise condo development would give them massive profits and exacerbate income inequality in the DTES. Their desire to gentrify our community into another Yaletown, where rents average $2,600 a month, does nothing to uplift us.
From 1960 to 1994, the federal government built or purchased, on average, 16,000 units of non-profit or co-op housing every year. By the early B次元官网网址90s, property-supremacist, trickle-down economic theory dominated government decision-making, and the feds stopped this contribution to communities.
Homelessness was not a pronounced issue in Vancouver until the 1980s, when Riverview Hospital began accelerating the displacement of its patients without adequate community supports.
Before then, there had generally been enough affordable housing provided by programs under the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation, initiated in 1946 by the federal government. However, funding cuts in the 1980s led to a significant decline in such programs, and eventually to their complete discontinuation by the early 1990s. This shift left the private sector able and willing to dominate housing development, prioritizing market-driven projects over affordability, the impact of which is visibly stark on VancouverB次元官网网址檚 streets, now overrun by unhoused residents.
On Instagram, the Carnegie Housing Project (@carnegie.housingproject) recently posted a reel interviewing staff member Devin OB次元官网网址橪eary, who reminded us that housing is a human right, recognized in both Canadian law and International law, but that B次元官网网址渇or decades now, the majority of people have had to live in a system where housing is not .125 treated as .375 a human right.B次元官网网址
OB次元官网网址橪eary, who also spoke at the town hall, noted that if housing is not treated as an essential service, it can force people into dangerous situations B次元官网网址 such as keeping an unsafe job, staying in an abusive relationship, spending entire incomes B次元官网网址 just to survive.
B次元官网网址淢eeting peopleB次元官网网址檚 needs immediately is the responsibility of our government,B次元官网网址 said OB次元官网网址橪eary, who along with the Carnegie Housing Project is calling for the newly elected B.C government to treat housing as a human right.
B次元官网网址淭he political will required to turn the governmentB次元官网网址檚 priorities needs to come from communities affected by these policies,B次元官网网址 the Carnegie Housing Project reported in a written statement. It spent the last year interviewing nearly 100 DTES residents and 11 community groups, and has developed a list of 42 recommendations for all levels of government to take action and end homelessness. The report, This IsnB次元官网网址檛 Working, can be found online at carnegiehousingproject.ca.