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Summerland works to remove encampments of unhoused people

Largest encampment required 12 person-hours of work
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In May and June, Summerland crews have been called twice to remove an encampment of unhoused people in Giant鈥檚 Head Mountain Park.

Bylaw officers in Summerland have been working to deal with camps of unhoused people in the community. 

In May and June, bylaw services and public works staff attended nine encampments and two illegal dump site cleanups. The largest of these required 12-person hours of work and resulted in two dump truck loads of garbage removed, Brad Dollevoet, director of development services said in a report to Summerland council.

The encampment cleanups have been smaller and less time-consuming, but have still required municipal staff time, he said.

In his report, Dollevoet said bylaw officers are seeing an increase in the number of people with serious mental health and addiction issues at these camps.

鈥淲hile many of these cases have chosen to move on to communities with additional services, the unhoused represent a significant resource draw on bylaw enforcement staff,鈥 he said. 

One camp was in the wooded area behind St. Stephen鈥檚 Anglican Church. Another was in Giant鈥檚 Head Mountain Park.

The encampment in the park was rebuilt soon after it had been dismantled, requiring municipal staff to attend this location twice.

Summerland staff have attended these scenes quickly before the encampments become well-established, Dollevoet said. However, the encampments are often set up shortly afterward, in new locations.

鈥淚t is a trend that鈥檚 growing every year,鈥 Dollevoet said. 鈥淚t was bad last year at this time. This year it鈥檚 worse."



John Arendt

About the Author: John Arendt

I have worked as a newspaper journalist since 1989 and have been at the Summerland Review since 1994.
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