Image: Supplied by Ross Aikenhead, permission granted by Ross Aikenhead / An abandoned RV in the Chilliwack River Valley is shown. Chilliwack resident Ross Aikenhead said he's heard nothing from MLA Bruce Ralson, the Minister of Forests, in regards to funding cleanups of homeless encampments in the greater Chilliwack area, leaving volunteers and environmental stewards to basically fund their own garbage runs to the Bailey Landfill.
Homeless encampments growing again

Homeless camps growing again after B.C. govt. ignores them, doesn’t fund Chilliwack cleanups

Mar 1, 2023 | 8:50 AM

CHILLIWACK — The 2023 B.C. budget as tabled yesterday by MLAs may have rightfully set aside $867 million over three years for mental health and addictions services.

But when it comes to funding cleanups for Chilliwack residents who want to keep toxic junk out of critical waterways and pristine forests, there’s nary a peep from provincial officials tasked with keeping encampments from proliferating.

After all the wonderful work done by Chilliwack-area volunteers to help clean up a homeless encampment along Chilliwack Lake Road and another near the Vedder Bridge the past few months, Chilliwack resident Ross Aikenhead said he’s heard nothing from Minister of Forests Bruce Ralston, an NDP MLA, about funding for cleanup efforts. He had contacted him in the past month in hopes of getting the minister responsible to act.

“It’s sort of an exercise in futility but we did get a lot of junk off the riverbed,” Aikenhead conceded. “Without the government actually doing something it will never end. They need to enforce the existing laws. FLNRO (Forests, Lands, and Natural Resources Operations) doesn’t do anything but shuffle the problems off on everyone else.”

The lack of involvement from the B.C. government means volunteers and environmental stewards will basically fund their own garbage runs to the Bailey Landfill.

Further, the encampment near the Vedder Bridge has now doubled from two tents to four tents. The tents are much bigger now compared to the smaller tents that were previously located there, Aikenhead added, leaving him exasperated.

“Pretty much, I’m not going to do anything in the CRV (Chilliwack River Valley) for now and there are several issues, including inhabited camps and abandoned RVs,” Aikenhead said.

Volunteers are forbidden from going into inhabited camps to demolish or take them away because only the provincial FLNRO can evict squatters from Crown lands. Similarly, abandoned RVs require some level of government authority to seize and recycle them.

“For now I’m putting my feet up and doing nothing just like the government,” Aikensaid said dejectedly. “It’s a pass-the-buck-around, merry-go-round of ice cream headaches. I’m trying to not point the blame on the FVRD because it’s actually a provincial issue.”