Homeless man's possessions thrown away by city workers - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:56 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Homeless man's possessions thrown away by city workers

The police and city are defending their policy of throwing out homeless people's belongings, after the B.C. Civil Liberties Association shot footage of city crews dumping a man's possessions into a garbage truck as an onlooker pleaded for them to wait.

Vancouver police and the city are defending their policy of throwing out homeless people's belongings, after a B.C. Civil Liberties Association membershot footage of city crews dumping a man's possessions into a garbage truckas an onlooker pleaded for them to wait.

Thevideo, shot Feb. 18,shows officials dumping several cardboard boxes while the bystander the owner's friend scrambled to save blankets and other items by putting them in his own cart.

The man whose items were tossed would only identify himself as Dennis. He saidhis things have been thrown out before and that it leaves him feeling bitter.

"Sometimes, if you're not quick enough, it's gone, or if you're not here, if you head out to go to the bathroom or get a coffee, too bad," said Dennis.

The city said when police, residents or businesses inform them of illegal structures or dwellings, crews are sent out to remove them.

"Nobody is allowed to set up a tent or some sort of living structure on any of our city sidewalks or boulevards or inner lanes," said Murray Wightman, manager of city operations.

David Eby of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association shot the footage and the rights grouptook their concerns about such incidentsto the police board last week but was told that police were not doing anything wrong.

"The policy was, in fact, exactly what I saw, which is, if no one is there with the belongings, that they would throw them away as abandoned goods," said Eby. "To my eye, they didn't look abandoned. They looked like someone's."

The city said it takes every opportunity to explain its policy to all individuals it deals with. As well, the city offersa five-page listof shelters where individuals can stay and sometimes it makes arrangements for people to keep items in a city storage locker for up to 30 days.