Showing posts with label Homeless Nation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homeless Nation. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2008


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-TORONTO:
COURT SUPPORT FOR MATTHEW RICKWOOD:
Across the country municipal authorities have responded to the increasing crisis of homelessness in Canada with an overwhelming determination to not solve the problem but to make it invisible. In Ontario the so-called "Safe Streets Act" is one such tool that is increasingly being used to try and disguise the problem, a legally sanctioned method to harass the poor and homeless and drive them from public visibility.
These legal atrocities are not going unchallenged. Here's an appeal from the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP) for court support for one challenge to the law. For further updates consult the OCAP website and also Homeless Nation.
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PRESS CONFERENCE/COURT SUPPORT: Stop Sweeping the Streets! Stop the Ticketing!‏:
Stop Sweeping the Streets!
Stop the Ticketing!
Press Conference and Court Support
Thursday November 20th, 2008
8:30 am
Old City Hall(Queen & Bay)
Free coffee & doughnuts
Matthew Rickwood, a young Toronto man, is appearing in court on Thursday with his lawyer, after being charged under the Safe Streets Act this summer for "encumbering of street".
In June, Matthew had just sat down on the sidewalk in Toronto's downtown east end, when he was approached by cops and served with a court summons. He had already been given multiple tickets, carrying fines he simply cannot pay. More to the point, he had done nothing wrong. Living on social assistance, after paying his rent and board each month, Matthew is left with $56 to survive.
In a letter sent to Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair, the Police Services Board and Mayor David Miller, Gary Magee, a lawyer from Justice for Children and Youth writes, "My view...is that the increase in Safe Streets Act charges is part of a practice of "proactive policing" of youth and the poor. The practice includes harassing this population by issuing invalid tickets for Trespass, Liquor Licence Act infractions, and bylaws such as "encumbering the street", "loitering", and"fouling the street."
OCAP is calling on the police to stop the harassment of poor people through the criminalizing and discriminatory practice of ticketing,and demanding that the City of Toronto take responsibility for the actions of Toronto police.
We agree with Justice for Children and Youth that "resources spent on charging, prosecuting, and incarcerating poor people, should be spent instead on affordable housing, parks and quality recreation and arts programming, as recommended in the recent Roots of Violence report by Mr.McMurtry and Dr. Curling." The priorities of the city have to change.
Join us in supporting Matthew, his lawyer, and others coming to the steps of Old City Hall to speak out against rampant police harassment that is sending poor people to jail for no reason, wasting resources, and depriving people of dignity and justice.
Press Conference and Court Support
Thursday November 20th, 2008
8:30 am
Old City Hall(Queen & Bay)
Free coffee & doughnuts
OCAP DEMANDS:
1. That cops stop issuing Safe Streets Act and other tickets against poor people for being poor. Last year the cops laid 10,500 Safe Streets Act tickets and thousands of other tickets for things like"encumbering the sidewalk" and other 'offences'.
2. That the mayor tell the cops to back off. David Miller must tell the police to stop laying tickets against people on the streets.
3. That the City provide legal representation for tickets. If the City's cops ticket people they should provide representation for people. Right now, people are going to jail for panhandling largely because they cannot get legal aid and have no one to represent them in court. This is a tremendous injustice and it has an easy solution: If the City is going to ticket, and prosecute people, they can provide lawyers too.

Thursday, October 16, 2008


CANADIAN POLITICS-BRITISH COLUMBIA:
HOMELESS WIN VICTORY IN VICTORIA BC:
Homelessness has been a growing problem in Canada, and it is likely to worsen as tougher economic times take hold. The usual response of civil authorities nationwide has been to make the problem as invisible as possible, to sweep the homeless under the carpet. Out BC way the homeless have won a court challenge against the Victoria BC bylaw that prevented them from erecting tents in public places. See THIS ARTICLE from the BC ATV News on the reaction of city authorities and the local Chamber of Commerce to the BC Supreme Court decision two days ago that struck down the city bylaw in question.
Homeless people responded rapidly to the decision, and as of yesterday a tent city has sprung up in the 'Mayor's Grove' section of Victoria's Beacon Hill Park. The story from The Hook follows below. For further info on the situation of the homeless in Canada see the Homeless Nation website.
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Tents erected in Victoria as Vancouver lawyers consider ruling:
By Andrew MacLeod
Eight tents stood together in the Mayors' Grove of trees in Victoria's picturesque Beacon Hill Park this morning as people across the province digested the court decision that struck down the city's anti-camping bylaws.

“It's a really important decision,” said Laura Track, a lawyer working on Pivot Legal Society's housing campaign in Vancouver. Pivot has a similar case pending, she said, but hopes Vancouver city hall will learn from the Victoria case.

“In light of this decision we'd like to ask the city if it makes sense to proceed with going to trial,” she said. “We hope this judgment will help them to see things more clearly.”

The Victoria decision rested on the fact there are way more people homeless than there are available emergency shelter beds. “To me I can't see what difference they're going to point to between Vancouver and Victoria,” said Track. Vancouver has about 700 shelter beds for 1,600 homeless people, she said. “We think the legal analysis would be identical here in Vancouver.”
David Arthur Johnston, who has been in and out of jail over the past few years as he's fought for the right to sleep in public places, characterized the time since the court decision came down as “24 hours of anarchy.”

Johnston, rubbing his hands together in the morning cold, said the campers will likely build a kitchen today and may soon make a fire pit for warmth. They have a portable toilet, he said, and the city may also provide facilities.

A bylaw enforcement officer paid a cordial visit to the tent sites this morning, but did not write any tickets. Police officers drove by, one said “good morning” through a loudspeaker, but did not stop.

Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe said yesterday that tent cities will not be allowed as they attract crime. He also blamed the federal and provincial governments for their failure to provide housing. “This judgment demonstrates what years of cuts to social programming and housing programs has done,” he said.

The province's housing and social development minister, Rich Coleman, is yet to make a statement on the ruling. He was unavailable yesterday and remained unavailable today.
“The judge just told the city it's been acting criminally as long as it's had those bylaws,” Johnston said, adding the police are welcome to enforce laws against criminal activity. “If they want to deal with it on a tent by tent basis, let them. If somebody's going to deal crack out of their tent they invite their own karma.”

Despite the weather, he predicted homeless people will erect more tents in the region. “A lot of people are just getting used to the information. Not everyone wants to live in a tent city.”

Andrew MacLeod is The Tyee's Legislative Bureau Chief in Victoria. You can reach him here.