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City committee votes to dismantle Transcona bus shelters over concerns about drug use, safety

City committee votes to dismantle Transcona bus shelters over concerns about drug use, safety

CBC
Friday, June 10, 2022 08:27:20 AM UTC

Winnipeg city council's public works committee voted Thursday to strip the glass, doors and seating from two bus shelters near Kildonan Place shopping centre at the behest of the area councillor, who has raised concerns about drug use and safety issues in the shelters.

Transcona Coun. Shawn Nason has been calling for the shelters to be stripped since January. He said the move is a last resort to ensure people struggling with addictions no longer use the bus stops instead of seeking help.

"I've been asked by the public almost daily for action. Now, this is not the action I wanted. It's the only tool we still hadn't full[ly] executed from a perspective of things we could do," Nason said following the committee's 3-1 vote.

The debate comes as Winnipeg's fire-paramedic service has seen a sharp jump in the number of calls to 911 for help at bus shelters.

The number of calls for service at shelters jumped from 1,222 in 2020 to 1,770 calls in 2021 — a 45-per-cent spike.

Earlier this year, Nason proposed, but then withdrew, a motion calling for restrictions on hoarding in public spaces, after some advocates warned it could be used against people who live in bus shelters and encampments.

At the time, he said his intent was to work with organizations working "to effect positive change on our homeless situation," including finding resources such as addictions services or housing for people using the shelters.

That proposal followed complaints from people in his ward about issues like items piling up in the shelters, discarded needles and public defecation, Nason said.

On Thursday, Couns. Markus Chambers (St. Norbert-Seine River), Devi Sharma (Old Kildonan) and Jeff Browaty (North Kildonan) voted in favour of the plan to strip the two Kildonan Place shelters.

The committee chair, Coun. Matt Allard (St. Boniface), was opposed.

Nason said the report will go to city council's executive policy committee next week, and then council as a whole on June 23.

He said he hopes the city can now move forward by connecting the people gathering in the bus shelters with better mental health and addiction supports.

Nason's call for taking the shelters apart was backed by Marion Willis, whose St. Boniface Street Links group routinely does outreach with people experiencing homelessness or struggling with addiction.

"I find myself in the uncomfortable position of supporting a motion that some or most organizations in my sector are going to reject," she said, explaining the bus shelters are being used not as places to sleep but as places to consume substances.

Read full story on CBC
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