Request to meet with Province rejected

Jul 19, 2022 | 3:39 PM

PRINCE GEORGE – Amidst a lengthy discussion around homeless encampments, a motion was put forward by Councillor Kyle Sampson with a specific request. It sought Council to “… formally requests that BC Housing, the Ministry of Social Development and Poverty Reduction and the Attorney General’s office come to the City of Prince George and meet with Council to inform Council, City staff and the public of what they are doing to address these issues our community is facing with homelessness and encampments.”

“Prince George is the Northern capital,” noted Sampson. “We are it when it comes to big municipalities in Northern BC. We are the hub. We deserve to know what’s going on.”

Mayor Lyn Hall opposed the motion, saying he is not opposed to meeting with representatives of those three provincial agencies, but he was concerned about what it would turn into.

“I wasn’t quite sure what that would turn into, to be quite blunt about it. For me, it’s easy to invite, but what does it look like, putting on that kind of session? So there was a comment made about a town hall meeting. There was a comment that they could come to Council Chambers. First of all, I think it would be difficult to get all three ministries together in one location and I think there’s a tremendous amount of preparation that goes into it.”

He says, as part of the Urban Mayors’ Caucus, the City does have the ear of government on those issues.

“The BC Urban Mayors’ Caucus, 13 of us around the province from the larger communities, we’ve done a tremendous amount of work at every level when it comes to the social issues that we’re all dealing with,” explains Mayor Hall.

As was pointed out during the debate, the government committed $633 million to combat homelessness in the budget, and Prince George has some of the highest numbers per capita for not just homelessness, but also drug toxicity deaths, and the City deserves to know what the Province is doing about it.

“We can continually say ‘This is what’s in our jurisdiction,’ policing, Bylaws, infrastructure. Stuff like that and we go above and beyond as a City. We purchased that land for the First Avenue housing project. Housing’s not our responsibility but we see the importance and the City of Prince George is investing. But we can’t build, manage or run hosing developments.”

Councillor Sampson, along with Councillors Garth Frizzell, Susan Scott and Cori Ramsay voted in favour of the motion, while the remainder of Council opposed, to defeat the motion.