Canmore man has been squatting on public land for years and says it's a form of protest
CBC
A Canmore man who has been squatting on public land for years says he has no plans to stop, despite the protest landing him in front of a judge this week.
"If society will not leave space for the poor to live, then the poor ought to take the space they need," said James Louden, 50, a dishwasher and poet.
Louden says he began living in a makeshift cabin on public land north of Canmore in 2014. He said it took him about a day to build the shelter, where he lived for seven years before being discovered by provincial conservation officers.
After refusing an order to vacate, officers and RCMP dismantled Louden's shelter last August. He was charged under the Public Lands Act.
The charge was withdrawn this week after the Crown determined there were aspects of the investigation that may not have been "procedurally compliant" and there was no public interest in proceeding with a trial.
"I'm just astonished," Louden told CBC News outside the courthouse Tuesday. "I think it's remarkable."
Former town councillor John Kende showed up at the courthouse to observe the case. Kende has taken an interest in Louden's situation, saying it speaks to wider problems of inequality and affordability that he's seen worsen over the decades.
"When we have a tremendous amount of tourism, a tremendous amount of well-to-do people who've got their second homes … we are producing more and more James types," said Kende, 87.
"The type of people who's got a minimum wage [income], or close to minimum wage, in a town which has been statistically the most expensive town, if not in Alberta only, but the whole of Canada."
There's no question that affordability is a major problem in Canmore.
Numbers tracked by Canmore Community Housing show that between 2020 and 2022, the average price of a two-bedroom rental went from $2,010 to $2,735.
The living wage in Canmore — the amount a person needs to live comfortably — is $32.75 an hour, the highest of all communities surveyed by the Alberta Living Wage Network.
And according to a Statistics Canada report published last summer, the town had the highest Gini index — a measure of economic inequality — of all urban centres in the country.
The problem is hitting even high-income earners these days, but it's made life untenable for those on the low-income end of the scale, Louden said.