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Image: Fraser Valley Today / Several people living in an Abbotsford encampment near City Hall have received trespass notices, requiring them to leave the site in late September for just over a week.
Eviction notices

Trespass notices give Encampment residents deadline to clear out site at Abbotsford City Hall

Sep 20, 2024 | 7:07 PM

ABBOTSFORD — Nearly 60 people living in an encampment behind Abbotsford City Hall have received trespass notices, requiring them to leave the site for at least 10 days, starting at noon on Monday.

In an email, city spokesperson Melissa Godbout said the notices were issued Thursday in accordance with the Trespass Act and the city’s Parks Bylaw.

They were given due to ‘safety concerns’ observed by local authorities.

“Even with the daily support from Abbotsford Police Department and contracted security support, the encampment has continued to grow and includes both the original protestors as well as people who are unhoused,” Godbout said.

“There have been increasing safety concerns identified by AbbyPD and the City’s Bylaw staff. Public safety is our top priority, which is why we have decided to move to close down this encampment.”

Police are expected on-site around 8 a.m. Monday, accompanied by city staff, to enforce the parks bylaw.

Most of the occupants arrived after two summer relocations involving 50 individuals who had been living in camps at Gladys and Babich parks.

At the time, Abbotsford Drug War Survivors program coordinator Brittany Maple, who is working as a liaison for the encampment residents, insisted that the Gladys Road encampment was necessary to protect the health and vitality of unhoused people amid what she described as an ‘unprecedented housing crisis.’

Maple says that despite the city’s action, they still ‘haven’t offered any reasonable solution’ to the issue, and that the shelter beds offered through BC Housing don’t meet individual needs.

The group plans to respond to a clause in the trespass notices, which indicates that individuals have the opportunity to address bylaw services if they believe their rights are being violated.

“So the group has collectively drafted a letter to the city outlining some charter violations that they feel are appropriate and highlighting some other really important factors,” Maple explained.

She went on to argue that there aren’t any safety concerns for the public, insisting the site has been ‘well managed by peers’ and ‘consistently cleaned up.’

Maple finds the timing of the eviction ‘of interest,’ as it appears to coincide with National Day for Truth and Reconciliation events on Monday, Sept. 30.

“The city is telling us that this is being done in the interest of public safety because … there has been increasing safety concerns,” Maple said. “We would definitely argue that that’s not the case.”

Godbout said that since the notices were served, six individuals have accepted shelter while the rest have declined.

She added that they will ‘continually offer’ shelter to individuals in the encampment.

Maple said they will be seeking public support through ‘a call to action’ to ensure the issue isn’t pushed back into their community parks, which she believes lack the capacity and resources to support the unhoused.

Last year, the city estimated around 400 people were experiencing homelessness, with at least 50 per cent living unsheltered.

An update on these numbers is expected to be presented to city politicians in early October.

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