
Encampment in Yellowknife sets up in new location after people living there told to leave
CBC
People who were living in a vacant lot in downtown Yellowknife have moved to a new location.
In the private parking lot next to a public housing complex on 51st Street, about a dozen tents and tarps are set up on the pavement for people who are struggling with housing.
"I'd like the public to know that we're not, you know, we're not degenerates … they make it look like we're all degenerates and drunks and alcoholics but I mean, we are people too," Craig Strachan told CBC on Monday afternoon.
Strachan spoke with CBC when people were packing up from the former location on a vacant lot at the corner of 52nd Avenue and 49th Street – after they were asked to leave.
People living on the lot were originally asked to be gone by Sunday night, less than a week after setting up. By Monday afternoon everything was removed.
The previous location is a vacant lot, owned by local realtor Adrian Bell, that is listed on the market for $989,000.
Bell told CBC it was a "difficult situation for all involved."
The new location is on the edge of the downtown core in a parking lot that reads "private property."
The building next to the parking lot is slated for public housing with $7.9 million in funding from the federal government given to the municipal and territorial government last year for the project.
When speaking to CBC, Strachan said he felt "secure" in the new location as people living in the encampment were trying to work with different levels of government to find a new spot.
"The biggest thing, you know, we got winter coming up and we need proper housing. There is a shortage of housing right now in the N.W.T. and there's a lot more people on the streets than you actually realize," Strachan said.
A spokesperson with the city confirmed officials with the capital were "aware that work is underway to transition the encampment to a more suitable location."
"The city is committed to working with partners, including the government of the Northwest Territories, to find ways to best support people experiencing homelessness within our capacity and scope as a municipality," Kerry Thistle, director of economic development and strategy with the city wrote in an email.
CBC reached out to the territorial government for comment.













