Image: Mike Vanden Bosch / Pattison Media / The Lonzo Road park and ride lot near exit 92 (Sumas Way) in Abbotsford is pictured during a recent visit. The park and ride lot has deteriorated into a toxic dump, but two civil liberties groups in BC are protesting its scheduled closure today (Monday, June 26), saying that forced evictions are illegal. The two civil liberties groups did not address the squalid conditions at the site that Abbotsford residents have had to deal with.
Advocates protest homeless camp closure

Homeless advocates protest closure of squalid Abbotsford homeless camp

Jun 26, 2023 | 11:55 AM

ABBOTSFORD — Two British Columbia organizations that advocate on behalf of vulnerable residents have sent an open letter to B.C.’s housing minister urging him to halt imminent evictions at a tent encampment in Abbotsford.

The BC Civil Liberties Association and Pivot Legal Society want Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon to stop any evictions at the Lonzo Road homeless camp, located on provincially-owned land originally intended as a park-and-ride in Abbotsford, near Cactus Club on Sumas Way.

The groups did not address the abysmal condition of the Lonzo Road park and ride lot, which has deteriorated into an squalid eyesore and contained piles of unsightly debris and toxic junk.

Abbotsford MLA Bruce Banman alleges that documents obtained through FOI processes outline the risks posed by the Lonzo Road Park and Ride homeless encampment, including explosions leading to highway closures, burned-out vehicles, criminal activity including a homicide, and more than 100 people camping at the site. The released version of the document also includes two-full pages of government redactions, withholding solutions received by Premier David Eby as Housing Minister to address the dangerous conditions at Lonzo Park, Banman said.

The letter from the civil liberty groups reminds Kahlon that several B.C. Supreme Court rulings have found forcible eviction is illegal when other housing options are inadequate.

Officials with the civil liberties association and Pivot say Lonzo Park residents report no one has offered alternative housing, and neither the city nor province have provided documents showing shelter or housing is ready for those facing eviction.

The letter calls on Kahlon and the provincial government to uphold an earlier statement that pledged to ensure encampment residents are “safe, healthy and treated with dignity.”

It says Kahlon and the B.C. government must end their support for the Lonzo Park evictions, and instead hold municipalities “accountable” for perpetuating human rights violations.