Still no solution for campers living under the Ville-Marie highway

The Quebec government has not proposed any concrete measures to relocate about fifteen homeless people who are camping under the Ville-Marie highway in downtown Montreal, as it promised to do two weeks ago. in court, lamented the lawyer for the campers, Monday, at the Montreal courthouse.


“There seems to be a will in theory, but no proposal or solution has been put forward” by the CIUSSS du Centre-Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal, mandated by the Ministère des Transports ( MTQ), revealed Mr.e Éric Préfontaine, who represents the campers in their proceedings before the courts to avoid their eviction from the land they have occupied for several years.

The lack of steps taken by CIUSSS workers to offer help to these homeless people also surprised Judge Chantal Masse of the Superior Court.


PHOTO PATRICK SANFAÇON, THE PRESS

The lawyer for the Mobile Legal Clinic, Me Donald Tremblay

Counsel for the Attorney General of Quebec, Ms.e Nancy Brûlé, underlined the remarks of a worker from the CIUSSS, who indicated in a sworn statement that she could only act for people who ask for help voluntarily. “As long as these people don’t come to her, she doesn’t intervene,” she explained.

Be proactive

“I am speechless,” responded Judge Masse. “With all the difficulties they have, these people are not necessarily going to seek help. Does that mean the worker is sitting in her office and waiting? We need to have a more proactive attitude. You have to go find them. Yes, it takes their collaboration, but there are organizations with which you should agree to find solutions. »

Among the fifteen campers, many have physical and mental health problems, others are addicted to drugs or alcohol. Some are in a relationship or have animals, which prevents them from having access to emergency shelters for the homeless.

In their statements, presented to the court, the employees of the CIUSSS indicate that they did not meet the campers, despite the government’s commitment to work to find accommodation for them that meets their needs.

Worse: since the camp moved further back from Atwater Street, under the Ville-Marie highway, CIUSSS personnel no longer go there, as a safety measure for the employees.

The campers, represented by the Traveling Legal Clinic, challenged their eviction in Superior Court, announced by the MTQ, which must carry out work at the place where they are installed. A first eviction notice had been served on them last November, but the government backed down at the last minute to give them time to find a place to relocate. Then, at the beginning of March, they were told that they had to leave before March 31, the date of the start of the work.


PHOTO PATRICK SANFAÇON, THE PRESS

One of the Ville-Marie highway campers, Michel Chabot, who is being treated for cancer.

Their request for an injunction calls for a period of up to July 15 so that they have time to find a new place to live. Me Nancy Brûlé said Monday that due to legal proceedings, the work would not begin before April 12 or 15, but that postponing it beyond this date would have significant consequences on the schedule. Judge Masse suggested that the start of the work be postponed until mid-May.

2.6 million plan

To relocate the group of campers in the long term, the organization Résilience Montréal, whose day shelter, located not far from the camp, offers hot meals and other services, has proposed an action plan of 2.6 million over five years. This plan includes the salaries of workers to accompany them, their immediate installation at the hotel, the time to find permanent accommodation that suits them, and all the other costs related to their moving in and their daily life. This request was refused by government officials.

The homeless lawyer argued that postponing their eviction until July would give them time to find a solution to relocate or, at worst, to pitch their tent elsewhere, when the weather will be milder.

“Currently, where can they go? Where can they relocate in a minimally decent way? “asked M.e Prefontaine. “Currently they are in the cold, but at least they are sheltered from the weather. It is the big misery! They have nothing, these people, except a tent and a highway above their heads! What the MTQ wants to do is deprive them of the little they have without offering them the minimum to be able to relocate elsewhere. »

“Their eviction would potentially have an impact on the health, safety and dignity of the residents of the camp. »

Judge Chantal Masse also put forward the fact that, to have the campers evicted from her land by the police, the MTQ would first have to obtain an eviction order from the court, which was not done. until now. “I’m amazed that we allow ourselves not to follow the processes provided for by law,” she said. Maybe it’s because of the clientele it’s about? »

The pleadings of the lawyers of the Attorney General continue Tuesday morning, after which the judge will have to render her decision.


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