Sunday, September 28, 2025

Pump up the volume on the social crisis

Gerd Altmann, Pixabay

I wrote a letter to the editor to the Victoria Times Colonist that they ran Sept 27 as an opinion piece, which I then posted on Facebook, where it got major traction primarily among people who aren't my "followers." 

I'm saying all of that because it has led me to conclude that those of us who think like this about the social crisis burning on all of our communities' streets need to be way more out there in public spheres with our thoughts. There is more support than we might think, and governments that only ever hear from the highly active lock-em-up types need to know that. 

Let's take a leaf from the populist playbook and get loud at every opportunity. (Ideally by pointing out the reality rather than just shouting angrily at the "other side" that they're idiots, though I admit I came pretty close to doing that in this particular rant, didn't I?) I fear that some of us in this fight have concluded that it's hopeless to openly push back against the current dominant narrative around the social crisis, because nobody's listening. I think we're wrong about that. 

Here's the piece: 

Everything about Les Leyne’s Sept 24 column filled me with rage, most especially Our Place CEO Julian Daly’s stunning misrepresentation of problems at the core of this social crisis burning in the hearts of our communities.

To take the tragic situation that is happening on our streets and blame it on our “anything goes” attitude and “endless accommodation” – I don’t even have words for the fury that evokes in me after decades of observing how this four-alarm social crisis came to be. We simply must quit listening to people speaking from the comfort of their nice, non-impoverished lives and get a grip on this tragic humanitarian crisis from the point of view of the people living it.

Medical triaging treats the sickest people first. Social triaging works in the opposite way – you must prove yourself to be sufficiently ready, worthy and stable enough to get help like housing and treatment. What that approach has created is a situation where the absolute sickest people are the ones left without care.

Imagine if cancer patients had to prove themselves “ready” to qualify for support. Still smoking? Not eating enough greens? Overweight? No care for you. Unable to fill out dozens of forms that you don’t even know exist while maintaining a polite, pro-social façade despite being racked with pain and anguish? Back of the line, buddy.

As if. But that’s what we’ve done here. We set up rules that only the healthiest of a sick population can possibly achieve, and blame the ones left behind for not trying hard enough. We dangle the promise of housing like a carrot to be had if someone can sufficiently demonstrate that they’re worthy of it. We tear apart encampments as if we expect the people living in them will vanish.

This is the criminalization of poverty and disability. We are sectioning people under the Mental Health Act as risks to themselves or others and then sending them, still sectioned, into the community to live homeless. We are walking all over people’s human rights, every single damn day.

 This is not “endless accommodation” – this is brutal, socially sanctioned neglect of extremely ill human beings, who are viewed with something far from compassion.

None of this is about drugs. Any of us would be using drugs if left in this situation. The drugs are the top layer on people’s multi-layered problems, but they’re the symptom, not the cause.

Why does this deepening social crisis never respond to any of our actions? Think about that. They’re the wrong actions. The sickest people are being shut out of support. That’s not “endless accommodation,” that’s just stupid, inhumane policy that leaves the very visible flames of a four-alarm social crisis to burn unattended on our streets.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

None of this is about drugs. True. Except for the %98 that is about drugs.

Jody Paterson said...

Absolutely there are drugs, lots of them. But if everyone was spirited off to Drug-Free Land tomorrow, they would still have all the traumas, disabilities, complexities, deep poverty, mental health challenges, brain injuries, etc etc that are underneath the drugs. Most especially, they would still be in a major housing crisis, in a city where the gap between the shelter allowance someone gets on income assistance and actual market rent is enormous ($500/month for shelter, average bachelor suite in the city now between $1300-1500). Again, just want to repeat - drugs are a symptom for the people we see on our streets, not the cause.

e.a.f. said...

Its not about drugs. Can recall working with people who were alcholics and came to work every day, did their job well and went home at night. A spousal unit lived in England, back in the day he can recall people he knew who were heroin addicts, who went to work each day and did their jobs well andP went home.
Sometime in the 1980s the Vancouver Sun had a series of articles about homelessness. They quoted one homeless man, if you're not crazy when you hit the streets you will be after living on them for a year.
People are homeless because they don't have a place to live. That is it. People aren't homeless because of a whole list of issues. They're homeless because as you write they can't afford homes. $500 a month gets you nothing to live in. Regardless of how "addled' you are, people will still prefer a place of their own with a bathroom and a lock on the door. Even if you are doing drugs, you want your privacy.
Back in the day, can't remember exactly when, perhaps the late 1960s or sometime in the 70s. a columnist in Vancouver wrote an article which included a line about being rich and being a heroin addict and being poor and being an addict. I recall a friend also advising being an addict in England was easier, if you obtained your drug for free. you could have a home, job, etc.
Drugs have always been in Vancouver. It is a port city. The problems arose when more powerful drugs hit the market, housing became too expensive, the population grew and the politicians did nothing because there was no demand from the public or very little to provide housing to those living on the streets. People only became really excited about the homeless when they started living on the streets and parks where the "monied" people lived, worked, etc.
O.K. I'll now have to figure out instagram. didn't use facebook until two years ago.
thank you for the work you do.