New faces in downtown Victoria may have been pushed out of Vancouver tent city, outreach groups say
CTV
Outreach workers in Victoria say the ongoing efforts to dismantle a tent city in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside may be having ripple effects on the Island.
"We're seeing some new faces coming down," said Grant McKenzie, communications director for Victoria's Our Place Society.
"They tend not to be people who are the most vulnerable – people who are on the street. For them, moving to a new city is very, very difficult."
Rather, McKenzie speculates that the new arrivals may be people who have the ability to move to Vancouver Island to prey on the less fortunate by selling drugs.
"We have seen a few conflicts on the street," McKenzie said. "People have their own protective communities or family units and when new faces come in a lot of times they're fighting for dominance and that can cause a ripple effect on the street."
Nicole Mucci, spokesperson for Union Gospel Mission in Vancouver, told CTV News McKenzie's theory makes sense.
"There isn’t housing being offered or other solutions, so if people are leaving as a result of the de-encampment, we wouldn’t be shocked," Mucci said.
Another Victoria organization – the Together Against Poverty Society – is stressing the need to distinguish any new arrivals from the local unhoused population.
“The reality is that people who don’t have homes are more at risk of harm than of causing harm," said Emily Rogers, a tenant legal advocate for TAPS.