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Thursday 21 March 2024

Homeless in Vancouver



When people talk about the homeless people in big cities, they think of these people as welfare recipients, drug addicts and other substance abusers. Let me share my recent experiences upon returning to Vancouver, Canada two weeks ago. 

For the first three days, I stayed at an AirBNB place in Burnaby and met a couple of Iranian visitors who were waiting for their work visas to be issued. One of them ended up staying in a shelter for men in New Westminster because he couldn't afford paying $45 CAD/night for a bed at the AirBNB place for more than two weeks. Accepting too many newcomers too quickly into Canada for the sole purpose of replenishing the labour force in this case backfires terribly.

I moved to a hostel in Jericho Beach just outside UBC on the fourth day. At check-in, I was informed that I could only stay up to 21 days on that property because I am a Canadian citizen. International tourists can stay a bit longer. In that area, there are students who sleep in cars at night and go to classes in UBC during the day. There are out-of-town Canadian citizens hopping from hostel to hostel every three weeks, paying on an average $50 CAD/night for a dorm bed in a hostel.

It had been extremely stressful to find accommodation in Vancouver. A room in a house would cost $700 - 1400 CAD/month. The lower end of the rent spectrum would be a tiny closet/room with no windows and the bathroom is shared by 4 or 5 people. Sometimes there is no shared kitchen. The upper end would be a bigger room with ensuite bathroom and shared kitchen. Sometimes there is a price reduction if there is no access to public transportation. A 1-bedroom apartment costs no less than $2500/month provided that you have good credit rating, pay stubs and good references.

A common occurrence is that many property owners would use their rooms to get underpaid services from their tenants. For example, ads of doing cleaning and maintenance work in addition to a rent payment of $350 - 600/month in exchange to stay in a room in an old house were posted daily on Craigslist. I have replied to those ads and confirmed that working no less than 60 hours per month was expected. Another common trick slumlords pull was to rent out bedrooms to be shared by two or more female international students. Each tenant would be paying $550/month for a space on a mattress. That way a small room can yield more than renting out to one tenant for each room. These slumlords target the international students in particular because the students are not familiar with the Residential Tenancy Act of BC. Where is the humanity of these landlords?

When take-home income for a full-time worker at minimum wage is around $2000/month, it is easy to fall through the housing cracks in Vancouver and join the rank of the homeless in this relentless housing shortage crisis. Homelessness is more common among the newcomers, students, seniors and working poor than most people could imagine. Housing is a human right. Canada is far from being the dream country that it promotes itself to be in developing countries.

#Canada #Vancouver #housingcrisis #workingpoor #homelessness