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  #61  
Old Posted May 23, 2019, 11:00 PM
Vin Vin is offline
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Some good news in the fight against drugs....

Undercover operation nets conviction of major Metro Vancouver fentanyl dealer
https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/fent...tence-may-2019

A Richmond man has been sentenced to seven years in jail for drug trafficking – including large amounts of fentanyl – after an investigation which began in 2014.

According to court documents, the case began in October 2014, when the VPD began investigating the drug trafficking activities of the man – identified as Raymon Singh Ranu – along with others.

Police began surveillance of a home located at 3653 East 27th Avenue, as part of the investigation and observed “persons and vehicles coming and going from the property.” Surveillance cameras were installed showing the perimeter of the home and the ‘feed’ from those cameras was monitored.

The surveillance also recorded Ranu’s vehicle, a grey Range Rover at the house on 47 of the 57 days of surveillance, and Ranu himself at the home on 45 of the 57 days.

At the same time surveillance around the East 27th Avenue house was taking place, the police introduced an undercover officer, Mr. M, into the investigation.

“He developed a persona who claimed to work in the Northwest Territories and would come to Vancouver on his days off to buy heroin and fentanyl to sell up North,” wrote the judge in the case, Judge Nancy Phillips.

Court records state that after the undercover officer “feigned a drug deal in the presence of a taxi driver, Mr. Khan, a co-accused, the driver said he knew someone who would be better to deal with, and offered to introduce Mr. M to that person.”

Ultimately, this person turned out to be Ranu.

“On occasion, drugs were provided to the officer by Mr. Ranu,” court documents state. “On other occasions, someone else in the taxi handled drugs or money while Mr. Ranu was in the vehicle, or by someone else after Mr. Ranu had negotiated a deal with the officer. ”

Two search warrants on the same day
Then, on February 17, 2015, a search warrant was executed at the East 27th Avenue home and a large quantity of drugs were found inside, as well as two pistols and an extended ammunition magazine. No one was in the home at the time of the search.

That same day, the VPD executed a search warrant at #87-9566 Tomicki Avenue in Richmond, and this time, Ranu was in the home.

During the search of the Richmond home, investigators found $2,400 in marked bills, a set of keys, – one of which granted access to the East Vancouver home — and six bundles of cash totalling $17,010 next to a container with a wallet in which there was photo identification of Ranu, who was arrested that day as well.

In her sentencing of Ranu, Phillips said she wanted to “highlight” a number of findings from the undercover operation.

She wrote that on December 18, 2014, Khan introduced the undercover officer to Ranu. The officer testified in court that “he and Mr. Ranu discussed prices and the ins and outs of the heroin trade.”

Phillips also wrote that the two men also discussed type, price, and quantity of pills.

“A more powerful form of the drug”
“Mr. Ranu suggested Mr. M. was looking for ‘Oxy 80s’ and said they were sold in batches of 1,000 for $10-$13 per pill. Mr. Ranu told Mr. M. that ‘black fentanyl’ was a new, more powerful form of the drug,” she wrote.

On January 16, the undercover officer met with Ranu again and “Ranu recommended the purchase of low-quality heroin to encourage people to buy pills instead,” the judge wrote. “Later that evening, Mr. Ranu directed a male in the taxi to hand the officer a small plastic bag and the officer handed the man $16,040.”

The bag was later determined to contain 1,003 fentanyl pills and 28.5 grams of heroin.

Then, on January 25, 2015, the undercover officer placed an order with Ranu for an ounce of heroin and 1,000 pills, according to court documents.

“In the audio recording in the taxi on this date, the undercover officer asked Mr. Ranu for advice on how to deal with the cash from the sale of the drugs,” wrote Phillips. “Mr. Ranu advised him to launder the money through casinos. Mr. Ranu said his fentanyl supplier drops off 10,000 pills at a time for him and he re-loads with another 10,000 when a batch sells.”

“Not a low-level drug distributor”
In determining the sentence, Phillips wrote that Ranu has a criminal record with two related convictions.

The 34-year-old “knew how powerful fentanyl was and he actively encouraged the undercover officer to get his customers to switch from heroin to fentanyl for monetary reasons,” she wrote. “He preyed on persons who are dependent on drugs with the social cost and human suffering that conduct entails.”

Additionally, Phillips wrote that the “quantity of the drugs involved show Mr. Ranu was not a low-level drug distributor,” and that he was the “prime negotiator with the undercover officer in the fentanyl and heroin sales.”

Ranu also “had a taxi on hand for his use,” the judge wrote. “He had a large quantity of cash in his Richmond residence. These things are demonstrative of a level of success in the drug trade. He made clear he knew how to launder the proceeds of crime in casinos, another matter of concern to the community.”

Ranu was also “observed regularly in the DTES (Downtown Eastside) a place where the use of drugs is notorious,” she said. “His presence in the DTES was something Judge Arnold-Bailey flagged as a concern in 2007.”

In her sentence, Phillips wrote that she accepts that Ranu has used the time he has been out on bail on the current charges to settle into a “pro-social” existence.

“His compliance on bail for four years suggests he is trying to live a law-abiding life,” she said. “In the circumstances, I find a sentence of seven years in jail appropriate for the trafficking charges and the counts of possession of fentanyl and heroin for the purpose of trafficking.”
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  #62  
Old Posted May 23, 2019, 11:04 PM
Vin Vin is offline
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Let's charge these people for attempted murder.....



51 charges laid in fentanyl and cocaine trafficking probe linked to gangs
https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/51-c...-investigation

Eight people — including two teens — are facing dozens of charges following a lengthy investigation linked to the Lower Mainland drug conflict.

In a release, Surrey RCMP said that on May 8, 2019, a total of 51 charges were laid against the following individuals for Trafficking and Possession for the purpose of trafficking in fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine:

Jeffrey Donald Lessard, 31 years old from Coquitlam
Janet Lynn Horvath 53 years old from Langley
Jonathon Joseph Thomas, 37 years old from Langley
Garrnett Thadeous Flannigan, 35 years old from Langley
Joshua James Pellerin, 33 years old of No Fixed Address
David John Hudon, 27 years old from Surrey
18-year-old female from Delta (who was a youth at the time of the alleged offence)
17-year-old male youth from Surrey
Police say Lessard also faces eight additional charges for Trafficking and Possession for trafficking fentanyl and cocaine from an unrelated investigation.

The Surrey RCMP Drug Section conducted the operation with assistance from Surrey’s Serious Crime Section and the Vancouver Police Department between April and August of 2018.

The investigation focused on suspects allegedly responsible for a prolific drug trafficking network in Surrey and Langley.

“Drug trafficking remains a significant contributing factor in gang related violence across the Lower Mainland,” said Surrey RCMP Pro-active Enforcement Officer Inspector Mike Hall, in a release.

“Together with our partners, we will continue to strategically target individuals and networks connected to the illicit drug trade.”

Anyone with information which may assist with this investigation is asked to call Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502, or contact Crime Stoppers if you wish to remain anonymous, at 1-800-222-8477 or www.solvecrime.ca.
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  #63  
Old Posted May 23, 2019, 11:17 PM
Vin Vin is offline
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Another jerk who contributes to the mess of DTES....


Notorious B.C. drug smuggler arrested again
https://vancouversun.com/news/crime/...arrested-again

Less than a year after B.C. skipper John ‘Phil’ Stirling was released from a U.S. prison where he served seven years for cocaine smuggling, the controversial sea captain is back behind bars.

Stirling, 65, was arrested off the Oregon coast April 9 on a sailing vessel allegedly carrying 28 seven-gallon jugs containing liquid methamphetamine.

According to U.S. court documents, Stirling deliberately overdosed on fentanyl after U.S. Coast Guard boarded his boat.

He told them he didn’t have vessel documentation and refused to produce identification.

“Upon further questioning by U.S. Coast Guard personnel, Sterling’s speech began to deteriorate until he was only able to communicate in mumbles,” the criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court, states. “Stirling was displaying signs of a possible drug overdose.”

Coast Guard agents administered medical aid to Stirling and evacuated him by helicopter to Astoria, Oregon. He was later transported by ambulance to Adventist Health Portland for additional treatment.”

The criminal complaint, signed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement special agent Todd Clements, says Stirling was overheard telling a nurse at the first hospital that he had taken a “large amount” of fentanyl that was “pure.”

“Stirling also told the nurse that he did it because he realized the coast guard was about to board him because he was smuggling,” the complaint says. “He also stated that he wasn’t trying to kill himself by taking the fentanyl, but that the amount he took was from a ‘kilo.’”

At the second hospital, Stirling was telling a nurse that he had been “busted.”

“When the nurse asked what he had been doing, Stirling stated that he was a drug smuggler. Stirling stated that he did not want to go to jail for the rest of his life and that he had a ton of meth and 10 loads of fentanyl that he was taking to Canada.”

Stirling is facing one count of possession with the intent to distribute methamphetamine.

The sailboat he was aboard, the Mandalay, is registered in Seattle. U.S. officials said it was spotted during a routine coast guard patrol, travelling north 225 nautical miles from Newport, Oregon.

Stirling has already made his first court appearance in Portland and was ordered remanded in custody until his trial.

He was only released from a U.S. prison on April 27, 2018 after serving most of a seven and a half year sentence handed to him by a Florida judge in 2013.

Two years before, he was arrested off the coast of Colombia on another vessel with 381 kilograms of cocaine bound for Australia.

Stirling is well-known to the RCMP in B.C. Back in 2001, his boat, the Western Wind, was stopped by American authorities in the Strait of Juan de Fuca with 2.5 tonnes of cocaine aboard, estimated to be worth $300 million at the time. The cocaine was stamped “Colombia” and wrapped in sugar sacks.

Because the boat was bound for B.C., the Americans handed Stirling and four others over to Canadian authorities. But Stirling and the others were never charged.

Then in May 2006, Stirling and four others were arrested again off Vancouver Island after police found $6.5-million worth of marijuana on board a 47-metre fishing vessel registered to Stirling. The men were all charged with drug-related offences, but the charges were all later stayed.

Stirling pleaded guilty in 1990 to several cocaine-conspiracy-related charges and was sentenced to five years in prison.

In 2002, Stirling told the Province newspaper that he was approached in the late ’90s by a prison acquaintance to skipper a boat from Colombia full of cocaine for the Hells Angels. Police had watched the meeting and asked Stirling to become an informant in the deal, he claimed. Stirling said the Hells Angels paid half for the Western Wind, which he bought to transport the massive coke shipment. He said police then double-crossed him, backing away from the arrangement and leaving him in the clutches of the bikers.
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  #64  
Old Posted May 23, 2019, 11:22 PM
Vin Vin is offline
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This is one step backward to the fight against Fentanyl use in BC and particularly the DTES...


'Serious breaches' by Vancouver police doom high-profile fentanyl trafficking case
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...case-1.5091528

Bethany Lindsay · CBC News · Posted: Apr 10, 2019 4:00 AM PT | Last Updated: April 10

Dennis Halstead and Jason Heyman were accused of running a drug ring that brought fentanyl, heroin and other drugs to the Downtown Eastside. (David Maialetti/Associated Press)

Dennis Alexander Halstead and Jason James Heyman were charged after a high-profile seven-month investigation, but the case against them fell apart in February, when a B.C. Supreme Court judge excluded the bulk of the evidence against them.

After a series of hearings that began last fall, Justice James Williams found there were several Charter violations by investigators.

"I do not make this decision without careful thought. As a result of this court's ruling, these criminal charges will not be adjudicated on their merits. That is regrettable; society deserves a better outcome," Williams wrote in a ruling posted online Tuesday.

The judge noted that the charges against the two men concerned a large-scale drug ring involving substantial amounts of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and guns — items that inflict "horrific damage" on the community.

But, he went on, "where the police commit serious breaches in their investigational activities, considerable harm is done if the courts send the message that such transgressions count for little, or that they can simply be overlooked."

The court registry confirmed that all charges against the two men have been dismissed. A VPD spokesperson declined to comment.

$1.8 million in drugs

Halstead and Heyman were both arrested in 2015 as a result of an investigation nicknamed Project Trooper, and later charged with multiple offences including possession for the purposes of trafficking and illegal firearms possession.

Six people would eventually be charged, but Halstead was the principal target of the investigation, and Heyman was believed to be his business partner, according to court documents. The other four were said to be lower-level dealers.
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  #65  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2019, 6:03 PM
Vin Vin is offline
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The sad state of affairs in Vancouver.

How do you explain Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside to tourists? It’s complicated…

Vancouver Courier
https://www.vancouverisawesome.com/2...rugs-tourists/

By John Kurucz - August 19, 2019


He’s flanked by his wife and two young kids when the Courier approaches.

The family of German tourists are in a hurry. They’ve just walked north along Hastings Street, up from Chinatown. They agree to speak, but for only five minutes.

They want out of the area and fast.

“I was here 20 years ago and it’s now very different,” Baumgarten says. “The people on the street. What happened?”

Within two minutes, a pair of Vancouver fire department trucks pass by with sirens sounding. They’re the medic trucks that respond to overdose calls. Four men directly across the street are openly using drugs.

Baumgarten is asked if he feels comfortable having his kids in the area.

“Absolutely not.”

Baumgarten’s wife offers this:

“[My son] is scared because he saw a needle, and he’s afraid to step on one,” she said.

Rare, if ever, is the case of someone stepping on a needle and contracting disease. Baumgarten’s son doesn’t know that. He’s 10 and quickly wants to move on towards Gastown.

Scenes like this play out repeatedly, and in varying degrees, on an August morning in the area where Gastown ends and Chinatown begins.

Australians Phill and Leonie Petrovic walk from the Gassy Jack statue east along Powell Street, having just arrived on a cruise ship three hours earlier. They get to Columbia Street and turn around.

“We made a decision about 100 metres back. We had a feeling that perhaps we were getting too far out of the tourist area,” Phill says. “So we’re crossing the road and heading back. We don’t need to see that, and we don’t want to put ourselves in a situation that might arise.”

The Courier spoke to 10 tourists in the span of a half hour and common themes came up time and again: safety was a concern, kids shouldn’t be exposed to widespread, open drug use and all big cities grapple with homelessness. Vancouver is no different in that regard, the tourists said, but the volume of open drug use and street disorder was jarring.

These encounters with tourists happen as the debate about Oppenheimer Park and the state of the Downtown Eastside intensifies.

On Monday morning, the park board issued an order requiring those camping in the park to vacate by 6 p.m. on Aug. 21. The Strathcona Business Improvement Association wants the tents gone and help given to those living in the park. Police officers won’t go near Oppenheimer unless in teams of four.

The VPD said Aug. 19 that 21 violent incidents took place in and around the park in the last week alone. Businesses in Chinatown are closing. This year’s homeless count recorded the highest numbers ever. The VPD has said the Downtown Eastside is arguably the most difficult place to work in law enforcement in Canada.

All of this transpires at the height of a tourist season expected to bring 11 million visitors to Vancouver, along with a 20 per cent uptick in cruise ship passengers.

Tourism Vancouver says each cruise ship brings in $3 million in economic activity, and tourism contributes about $5 billion to the Metro Vancouver economy annually.

Tourism Vancouver’s website contains little, if any, information about what awaits tourists once they leave Gastown and head east. The Port of Vancouver doesn’t tell incoming cruise ship passengers about the Downtown Eastside either.

Tourism Vancouver president Ty Speer says he’s open to that discussion, though he’s unsure if a tourism bureau should lead that messaging.

Two high-profile stories from July come up in conversation: the Danny Green incident and the escalating disorder near the Patricia Hotel. In a July 9 podcast, the former Toronto Raptor called East Hastings the “worst street in North America” in terms of open drug use. Meanwhile, hundreds of travel website reviews from visitors the world over decry the open drug use and lawlessness around the Patricia.

“I’m always very careful not to see the whole world as a function of one, two or three incidences,” Speer said. “They’re not good, we don’t want to see them. But in the whole scheme of things, we’ve got an enormous number of people saying positive things about tourism in Vancouver.”

Sue Pastorcic and Tresa Nelson meet with the Courier at Keefer and Columbia streets, in front of the Chinatown Memorial Plaza. They’re part of a pilot program called the Chinatown Community Stewards, which is managed by EMBERS Eastside Works in partnership with the city and Chinatown community.

They’ve been on the job five weeks and are tasked with cleaning up needles, helping businesses deal with increased crime and connecting with tourists.

Pastorcic has picked up 20 needles in an hour outside the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Chinese garden. Two open-top tour buses stop in front of the memorial and an aggressive woman appearing to be in a state of impairment hurls obscenities at the tourists.

“Those tourists didn’t do anything, they’re just trying to see the city,” Nelson said. “I feel really sorry for some of these cruise ship passengers who know nothing about [the conditions] down here.”

Both Nelson and Pastorcic are former drug users and now work in harm reduction. They’ve spent decades in the Downtown Eastside and won’t allow their kids or family members to visit the area.

A tour bus driver is approached directly outside of the Sun Yat-Sen building. He says tourists are “very surprised” with what they see in the area. He recommends that none of them get off the bus until it has left Chinatown.

While investigating how — or if — tourism is affected by the ongoing issues on the Downtown Eastside, the Courier heard from dozens of people who live, work and play in the area.

Four words came up in almost every interview conducted over the course of a six-week investigation: “it’s never been worse.”


Bad for business

Green Party Coun. Pete Fry has lived in Strathcona for about 30 years. He speaks to the Courier in late July, shortly after owners of the Patricia Hotel go public with their concerns about the neighbourhood.

“Businesses down there are suffering incredibly,” Fry said. “It’s not only the thefts and the street disorder, it’s also scaring business away. I’m getting daily reports from folks who are upset, stressed out. They’re wanting some kind of action.”

A Starbucks at Main and Keefer closed earlier this summer, and the company wouldn’t say why when asked by the Courier. Some have suggested the shop shut down due to an inability to retain staff willing to work in the area.

Three business improvement associations operate in or around the Downtown Eastside.

Numerous interview requests to the Chinatown BIA were not returned. The Strathcona BIA released a survey Aug. 13 suggesting 83 per cent of respondents wanted Oppenheimer Park returned to its original purpose — a green and social space. Businesses in the area have reported a loss of customers and an inability to retain staff due to safety concerns.

One business in the vicinity of the park noted “the number of violent incidents has spiked in the time since it has become a tent city” and “the number of times we have had to call 911 has risen beyond a point of reasonable expectation.”

Sue Pastorcic is an ambassador with the Chinatown Community Stewards program. She met with the Courier in mid-August near Columbia and Keefer streets, where she had picked up 20 needles in the span of an hour.

Hastings Crossing BIA executive director Brennan Fitzgerald said some of his members are reporting worsening business conditions as well.

“I’ve seen a spreadsheet from one of those property owners, and it’s very clear that the amount they’re spending on increased security and dealing with the results of that kind of activity — graffiti removal or cleaning — is going up,” he said.

Fry lists issue after issue affecting the area in a span of minutes — some he’s seen, others he’s heard about: a bike chop shop in Oppenheimer, a new gang operating in the park’s periphery, increased assaults and violence, theft and extortion from local businesses.

Somewhere inside the last two to three years, the area changed, he said. It’s the result of a “systemic failure” of all three levels of government. More housing and security for area residents and businesses is needed.

Some comments about a recent Courier story highlighting the problems around the Patricia Hotel suggest the owners shouldn’t have purchased in the neighbourhood 23 years ago — that what’s happening in the Downtown Eastside is normal.

“It’s an oversimplification to take that approach,” Fry said. “You can’t say this is normal if you don’t actually know what you’re talking about and live in the neighbourhood where you can walk the walk and talk the talk.”

Abelardo Mayoral-Fierros is a concert promoter who’s staged about 500 shows across the Downtown Eastside over the last decade: at the Rickshaw, Astoria and Pat’s Pub, along with numerous other venues that no longer exist.

Mayoral-Fierros brings bands to Vancouver from all across the world and is in the Downtown Eastside several times a week. He agrees with Fry’s timeline: two or three years ago, it was relatively safe and he’d tell bands the Granville strip was far more dangerous.

“Some of them say they don’t want to come back,” Mayoral-Fierros said. “I booked a band from Detroit who said the neighbourhood was apocalyptic. These are bands that tour the world and they tell you they’ve never seen anything worse.”

(Full disclosure: Courier reporter John Kurucz has and continues to perform at concerts booked by Mayoral-Fierros.)

Mayor Kennedy Stewart and police chief Adam Palmer were asked about the state of the Downtown Eastside in mid-July, on the same day Patricia Hotel owners Daryl Nelson and Lindsay Thomas appealed to the police board for help.

Both said more housing is needed and that tourists have little to worry about if they travel to Main and Hastings. Stewart said he’d be going to a gig at the Rickshaw that weekend, but not before stopping for food at Dixie’s.

The popular barbecue joint at Main and Hastings was in the midst of shutting down its storefront operations when Stewart made those comments and the closure was attributed to a lack of foot traffic in the area. Palmer described it as a “challenging neighbourhood.”

“There’s lots of stuff going on there and [Nelson’s] observations I would say are correct — challenging neighbourhood, with mental health, addiction issues, homelessness. We recognize that, as all Vancouverites do,” he said.

By the numbers:
Vancouver police statistics for June show Strathcona had 70 assaults, 106 thefts from vehicles, 11 robberies and 31 break-ins to residences and businesses. In June alone, police responded to 92 emergency calls in Oppenheimer Park. There were 87 calls in May. For all of 2018, there were 666 assaults, 799 thefts from vehicles and 68 robberies in Strathcona.

The same stats are far worse in the Central Business District, the area bound by Burrard and Main streets, stretching north to Coal Harbour and including the Granville Entertainment District. In that neighbourhood there were 1,590 assaults, 5,223 thefts from vehicles and 208 robberies.

A total of 2,223 people in Vancouver were counted as homeless in March — a new record — compared to 2,181 people last year. That number was 1,746 in 2015 and 1,364 in 2005.

More than 1,000 people didn’t participate in this year’s survey questions about drug use.Of the 1,156 people who did, 33 per cent said they had an addiction to opioids. Another 29 per cent had an addiction to methamphetamines, 22 per cent to alcohol, 21 per cent to marijuana and 14 per cent to cocaine.

Almost half of respondents cited a mental health issue. Overdose deaths are decreasing this year, with 144 reported as of June 30 compared to 195 during the same timeframe in 2018. Vancouver Coastal Health had the highest rate of overdose deaths in the province in 2017 and 2018. There were 439 deaths reported in the Vancouver Coast Health region by the end of December 2018, the highest ever.

More than $2 million was spent on trying to revitalize and redevelop Oppenheimer Park in 2009.A Vancouver Sun report from 2014 suggested more than $360 million in annual funding was going into the DTES — roughly $1 million per day. Of that money, $265 million came from all three levels of government. The same report suggested there were close to 300 agencies operating in the neighbourhood at that time.

By mid-2015, provincial rates of illicit drug deaths surpassed those seen in 1997 and 1998 when a public health emergency in the Downtown Eastside was declared in response to an epidemic in HIV infection rates and illicit drug fatalities.

In April 2016, B.C.’s provincial health officer declared a public health emergency in response to the rise in drug overdoses and deaths.

Overall life expectancy in the Downtown Eastside dropped sharply from 2013-15 to 2016-17 from 77.39 years to 75.02 years. The discrepancy in life expectancy between men who live in the Downtown Eastside and those who live in Vancouver’s West Side in 2016-17 was nearly 15 years.


What’s being done, what has been done

In April, B.C.’s provincial officer of health Dr. Bonnie Henry called for the immediate decriminalization of people who use drugs in B.C., a stance echoed in August by the Nurses and Nurse Practitioners of British Columbia and the Harm Reduction Nurses Association.

Vancouver Coastal Health chief medical health officer Dr. Patricia Daly delivered her annual report in late July, as tourist season neared its apex.

Daly’s report makes 21 recommendations, including a regulated, legal supply of drugs, which she said is the single-most urgent of her recommendations; improving access to opioid agonist treatment; expanding programs that help prevent problematic substance use and, strengthening the system of care for people with substance use disorder.

To the latter point, Daly said:

“People with addictions and their families must navigate a complex and fragmented system of care that includes programs that may not make use of evidence-based treatment or employ best practices,” Daly wrote. “It is not currently possible to evaluate the system overall or its components, which can include outpatient or inpatient treatment, withdrawal management services and residential recovery.”

Sources who spoke to the Courier for this story suggest that many DTES services operate in silos and in isolation, largely over political affiliations.

“Thanks to neoliberalism, we see housing providers that are in competition,” Fry said. “It’s no secret that some housing providers have better relationships with certain governments: NDP, Liberal, Vision. There are preferred alignments, but the nature of bureaucratic systems has led to this.”

On the housing front, 10 temporary modular housing buildings have opened in Vancouver between March 2018 and June 2019.

The total number of modular housing units built under a program funded by the provincial government sat at 606 as of mid-June. City staff said 503 of the tenants who moved in were previously homeless.

The mayor, police chief and Fry have said housing is the primary tool to address many issues facing the DTES, and Vancouver East MP Jenny Kwan agrees. The four of them believe now is time to revisit the Vancouver Agreement.


Vancouver Agreement 2.0

The Vancouver Agreement was struck in 2000 between the city, province and federal government. It was meant to “to support local community solutions to economic, social, health and safety issues,” and the DTES was to be the first area of priority. About $30 million was invested into the plan.

The VPD created a beat enforcement team, conducted ticketing blitzes and ran project after project to stem the flow of drugs. Conditions in some single-room-occupancy hotels improved, while other hotels were shut down entirely. Some hotels remained, and the living conditions worsened. HIV rates in the Vancouver Coastal Health region dropped by more than 50 per cent between 2011 and 2019.

The agreement was to be re-examined in five-year intervals, and Stephen Harper’s Conservative government allowed the partnership to end in 2010.

A provincial MLA at the time, Kwan was a signatory on the agreement. She’s asked what the agreement accomplished, given the perpetual reports of lawlessness and open drug use in the years since.

Kwan lists the opening of the supervised injection site Insite in 2003, coordination in resource delivery and the adoption of the four pillars drug strategy: harm reduction, prevention, treatment and enforcement.

Despite those changes, Kwan said many problems remain.

“I’ve never seen our community so challenged as they are today on the issue around homelessness, around supports for our community,” Kwan said.

As for the current state of the area, Kwan places blame almost exclusively on both current and past federal Liberal housing policies. She says B.C. has missed out on 1,700 new affordable housing units since the National Affordable Housing Program was cancelled in 1993.

In 1998, Kwan’s NDP government closed Riverview Hospital. The hospital formerly housed the mentally ill and those living with drug addictions. Many of those displaced patients ended up on the Downtown Eastside.

In late 2017, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government announced a $40-billion, 10-year national housing strategy that aims to reduce chronic homelessness by 50 per cent in Canada. Kwan says little, if any of that money, has made its way into her community. Zoning changes, finding operators and getting non-profits on board could delay the completion of that housing stock until 2030.

Kwan is asked what she’d tell a tourist going into the Downtown Eastside.

“I go to Main and Hastings quite regularly. All the time. And, of course, we have challenges. We do. I’m not going to deny that we have challenges, but nor am I going to tell people, ‘Don’t go into our community.’ I would never do that,” Kwan responded.

Two decades in the DTES
Michael Leland has lived in the Downtown Eastside for more than 20 years, making ends meet by binning — he makes about $15 a day — and through disability payments. He lives in a Vancouver Native Housing Society building and pays $375 for rent each month.

Leland, 60, speaks to the Courier for more than an hour near Main and Cordova streets. He speaks to changes he’s seen in the area, his interactions with tourists and the ever-increasing tension over Oppenheimer Park.

The park is a lightning rod for Leland, and he suggests, few if any, of the campers are longtime Vancouverites. Instead, Leland, Nelson and Pastorcic all insist Vancouver is a destination for homeless people from across Canada.

“Everybody’s got a sh***y end of town. We are the sh***y end of town. Us guys down here, we know it’s a sh***y end of town,” Leland said. “If you’ve got to be poor, East Van is the easiest place to be poor. You get three, four meals a day for nothing. That’s what attracts people to Oppenheimer Park.”


Michael Leland has lived in the Downtown Eastside for more than 20 years. He’s led more than 40 tourists out of the neighbourhood this summer alone over concerns for their safety. Photo: Dan Toulgoet
Leland admits that he’s no angel. He’s suffered numerous health setbacks, including a massive heart attack recently that’s left his heart operating at 30 per cent capacity. He was a “raging alcoholic” for decades before cutting back substantially nine years ago. Leland concedes he’s not long for this world and will die in the DTES.

“Yes, my days are numbered,” he said.

The former commercial fisherman remembers the “problematic area” stretching from Cambie to Main streets upon his arrival in the late 1990s. Now he suggests that area stretches from Victory Square to Clark Drive, if not Nanaimo Street.

Leland estimates he’s led more than 40 tourists out of the area near Pigeon Park back into Gastown this summer alone. Leland said his sympathy for the homeless is endless, but his patience wears thin on the issue of open drug use.

“The most important thing people don’t realize is that the people who live down here consider it our community. People overlook that. They don’t realize there’s a core group of people down here who live a normal life. Yes, we have our problems or we wouldn’t be down here,” Leland said. “But something has to be done. It’s got to be dealt with. Not maybe. Not ‘We’ll think about it.’ Do something about it. This is not normal. You don’t have needles in front of every doorway and consider that normal.”

@JohnKurucz

— with files from Mike Howell and Jessica Kerr
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  #66  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2019, 6:58 PM
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I brought my aunt in from the Netherlands last summer. Her first trip from the airport to our house, we went down Hastings and through the DTES.

Woah, boy was that shocking for her. That does not exist in any way shape or form for her back home.
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  #67  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2019, 7:32 PM
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Good read and thanks for posting. I have worked down there and the homeless support systems is big business. As the one resident says in the article everyone wants to live there that's homeless as you get fed. The area is full of low income housing from private charity built apartment blocks to purpose built modern SRO's. But the problem is the people keep coming from all over Canada. And you cant point a finger but the weather here is one of the reasons we attract the homeless of Canada. Also the reason why you can build a 100 beds and next week a 120 more people show up
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  #68  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2019, 7:43 PM
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Former NPA Councillor George Affleck does a scathing takedown of Mayor Kennedy Stewart in the Daily Hive:

Opinion: Kennedy Stewart has simply not stepped up to lead as Mayor of Vancouver

...When I was on Vancouver City Council (even with Vision Vancouver in charge), we usually found a way to get these urban tent dwellers to move along. For the most vulnerable and at-risk people, staff worked extremely hard to find the best solution for them. It was complicated and took a lot of time. But the one thing we all knew from the evidence provided by people on the scene every day, was that a disturbingly large number of the Mountain Equipment-clad campers in the park were neither homeless nor vulnerable. They were protesters.

It is nearly September – which means this particular tent city is about a year old, the same age as Vancouver’s newly-elected City Council and the same length of time we’ve had a new mayor. A new leader. And yet it’s taken until now to take action to dismantle it.

Unfortunately, this new mayor – the guy who ran a campaign emphasizing his first name, not his last, to evoke and likely tap into the bygone days of US-politics that continue to be romanticized in documentaries and film – has done nothing to solve the issue. Kennedy Stewart sat on his hands, and didn’t get them dirty at all. In fact, he was so lacking in leadership that he had one of his 40-plus communications staff employed at the City of Vancouver (don’t get me started on the spin at City Hall) to write a press release saying that it was the Park Board who was behind removing the tents and not the city.

How can that be considered leadership? That’s rhetorical by the way. It’s not, obviously...


https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/kenn...ership-opinion
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  #69  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2019, 7:50 PM
WarrenC12 WarrenC12 is offline
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Originally Posted by whatnext View Post
Former NPA Councillor George Affleck does a scathing takedown of Mayor Kennedy Stewart in the Daily Hive:

[I]Opinion: Kennedy Stewart has simply not stepped up to lead as Mayor of Vancouver
Stewart has been far less visible in the media than Gregor, I'm not sure if that's good or bad.

Certainly very easy for Affleck to yell from the cheap seats after quitting council...
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  #70  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2019, 8:02 PM
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Philip Owen was a quiet behind the scenes guy who did a good job, but can't recall if the City had as many problems back then.
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  #71  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2019, 8:43 PM
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My poor cousin works at a dentist office down there and she's getting stressed out because these guys seem to be getting more aggressive with her.

It's incredible to think that the DTES could actually deteriorate any further, but it has. The City finds homes or shelters for those campers at Oppenheimer, but they will only be replaced with a new set of campers. Our most historic and what should be treasured part of the city is left to rot even further. It's a crisis situation and there needs to be a new strategy deployed.
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  #72  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2019, 9:03 PM
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I brought my aunt in from the Netherlands last summer. Her first trip from the airport to our house, we went down Hastings and through the DTES.

Woah, boy was that shocking for her. That does not exist in any way shape or form for her back home.
I think that does not occur anywhere in the world, and I can say even poorer developing countries don't have situations like what we have in DTES. It is truly deplorable how Vancouver can let it get to what it is today. Sorry to hear that your aunt from Holland had to experience our horrors.

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My poor cousin works at a dentist office down there and she's getting stressed out because these guys seem to be getting more aggressive with her.

It's incredible to think that the DTES could actually deteriorate any further, but it has. The City finds homes or shelters for those campers at Oppenheimer, but they will only be replaced with a new set of campers. Our most historic and what should be treasured part of the city is left to rot even further. It's a crisis situation and there needs to be a new strategy deployed.
Constant spoon-feeding without any follow-up actions is never going to solve the crisis. Follow-ups include mandatory detox sessions, job placements, jail-time for the hardcore criminals, treatment for the mentally ill, and more bylaws/enforcement. So far, this City is only good at sweeping all the "dirt" under the carpet without addressing potential future issues simply because money is relatively easy to come by: they just need to dip their hands into the tax cookie jar.

There are so many things they can do. One of them is to at least come up with a bylaw that bans all future campers in all City parks, or even in front of businesses.


Video Link

Last edited by Vin; Aug 23, 2019 at 6:47 PM.
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  #73  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2019, 9:11 PM
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Originally Posted by logan5 View Post

It's incredible to think that the DTES could actually deteriorate any further, but it has. The City finds homes or shelters for those campers at Oppenheimer, but they will only be replaced with a new set of campers. Our most historic and what should be treasured part of the city is left to rot even further.
If the city/province doesn't do an about-face on its policies of accommodation, which have brought us to this wretched state, things are only going to get even worse. When you hand out free stuff, the line just gets longer and longer.

Indeed, if the city/province doesn't reverse current policy, no one should be surprised if Vancouver's first big city historic district, which is a national treasure, goes up in literal smoke any day now.
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  #74  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 12:03 AM
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When I was in Vancouver earlier this month I had the displeasure of driving along East Hastings.

Having now lived away from the city for 6 years all I can say is I was completely shocked.

The blight has became far worse and I would call it not only a black eye for the city, but a national embarrassment.

Last time I was there I remember the crowd of homeless at its most dense only extending for about a block, now it is nearly 4 or 5 times as long and disgusting.

I have never understood how being homeless is a license to burry city streets in mountains of trash.

Ironically I drove through there with my cousin who is a recovered drug addict and spent a couple years of his own life on east Hastings.

To paraphrase him he said everything there needs to go. The current soft handed system of passivity and even enabling needs to be completely changed; AKA the current approach is heavily flawed. Essentially the “community” that many protesters fight to protect is poison for those living there and only enables addicts to become worse. It wasn’t until he was removed from the area that he recovered. Since then he has been sober for over 7 years, has a good steady job now, and even just bought his first apartment. A far far far better outcome than if he had remained in the cesspool of the DTES.

A more hard handed approach does not mean no compassion, in fact in this situation it can easily be argued to be more compassionate than the current status quo which now decades in has easily proven itself as a major failure. Of course this approach needs adequate funding for hospitals, rehab facilities, housing, etc... Much of this should be funded by the federal government seeing how many of those on Vancouver’s streets are from out of city and province.

Okay, done my rant. Nothing will change (or those in charge will double down on the current flawed approach) and next year I expect to see the war zone to have grown by another block or two when I am in town again.
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  #75  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 12:05 AM
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Just going to point out that incarceration and rehab are kind of moot points until they finish rebuilding Riverview.
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  #76  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 4:23 AM
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I'm sure that the blight of East Hastings will improve with more government handouts on your tax dollar .

It's been 10 years of free handouts and safe-injection sites; where are the results?
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  #77  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 5:48 AM
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Just going to point out that incarceration and rehab are kind of moot points until they finish rebuilding Riverview.
Opens in December with 105 beds. I don't think it's big enough.

http://www.bcmhsus.ca/about/developm...-and-addiction
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  #78  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 6:13 PM
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There is one big reason why all the free handouts are still going despite them not working: they support a whole slew of industry benefiting from the government funding, be they SRO housing, injection site workers, healthcare system, security, pharmaceutical and medical equipment companies, needle manufacturers, etc. etc., these organizations employ a large number of people sucking up tax payers' money. Certainly not a good excuse in any way you see it, as the primary objective of solving the issues is actually put on the sideline. I think people in these sectors of the industry actually are the ones supporting the system, and decry an end to it, and calling others who oppose the system as "unsympathetic" or even "heartless".

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I'm sure that the blight of East Hastings will improve with more government handouts on your tax dollar .

It's been 10 years of free handouts and safe-injection sites; where are the results?
Exactly. You do get a lot of the free needles ending up in the back lanes and parks, potentially harming people. Should sue those giving out these harmful paraphernalia. Also more are dying on the streets: be they from overdoses or simply wasting their bodies away.
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Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 6:34 PM
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Good read and thanks for posting. I have worked down there and the homeless support systems is big business. As the one resident says in the article everyone wants to live there that's homeless as you get fed. The area is full of low income housing from private charity built apartment blocks to purpose built modern SRO's. But the problem is the people keep coming from all over Canada. And you cant point a finger but the weather here is one of the reasons we attract the homeless of Canada. Also the reason why you can build a 100 beds and next week a 120 more people show up
I agree with most of what you said, especially how the homeless support systems is big business, but also need to point out these are the kinds of businesses that do not really benefit society or humanity as a whole. Prolonging the painful deaths of someone by providing free housing, food and drugs, while the person deteriorates in a very unhealthy manner just to make money out of them, are nothing but being immoral. The funding and energy can be used to get the person out of addiction and return him/her to being functional, or heal the person from addiction-caused mental problems.

Also I think it is a myth to say that the homeless here are mostly from other parts of Canada due to our fairer weather. I know someone who worked as a counter of the homeless during the last count, and from that he told me that only a small percentage of the people are actually from far away. Most of them have lived in this city and province for decades.
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Old Posted Aug 23, 2019, 6:54 PM
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My poor cousin works at a dentist office down there and she's getting stressed out because these guys seem to be getting more aggressive with her.

It's incredible to think that the DTES could actually deteriorate any further, but it has. The City finds homes or shelters for those campers at Oppenheimer, but they will only be replaced with a new set of campers. Our most historic and what should be treasured part of the city is left to rot even further. It's a crisis situation and there needs to be a new strategy deployed.
Our historic district is pretty much gone on East Hastings Street at the DTES and the immediate surroundings. Once the city designates many of the heritage buildings as SROs, they are pretty much being condemned.

Our heritage buildings:
Video Link
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