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  • Home
    • Connecting with our WR Municipalities & Local Democracy
    • Human Rights - Leaning in & Learning >
      • A Human Rights approach to encampments - What does this mean?
      • Exploring the Key Principles of "A National Protocol for Homeless Encampments in Canada"
      • Draft Policy – Encampments on Region-Owned Public Lands
    • Living Rough >
      • Living Rough: Warming & Cooling Centres
      • Info Page: Living Rough: Encampments
      • Living Rough: Victoria/Weber Encampment 1.0: Summer Recap
      • Living Rough: Washrooms
      • Unsheltered: Living the Experince
    • Advocacy - Nickles and Dimes >
      • Open Letter: ​Seeking aid for Unsheltered in face of current Extreme Weather Crisis
      • CAEH Conference Ottawa 2024
      • WR Women's Shelter - What's going on? Regional Council Meeting
      • 519 Community Collective: Enough is Enough
      • Me Proposal Jan 13th 2020 Details
      • Unsheltered Campaign Letters to Local Municipalities
      • Unsheltered Campaign 2022 Municipal Candidate Pledge
      • My "nickel": Victoria and Weber Encampment
      • Love, compassion and a whole lot of action!
      • As we start having more of the difficult conversations surrounding Unsheltered lives
      • Social Justice Housing Rally
      • On the right to adequate housing
      • Host Bob Jonkman connects with Regan Sunshine Brusse , Anti-Poverty activist with the Alliance Against Poverty
      • The Record: Letter to the Editor re: oneROOF Funding Loss
      • Community Forum: Videos
      • Alliance Against Poverty Supports Local Grassroot Plea For Aid
      • Blue Sky Horse Radio Segment - Martin Asling, Lesley Crompton, And Terry Kaan
    • Around here - Older content
    • Municipal Meeting Pages >
      • April 23, 2025 Regional Council Meeting & 100 Vic. Proposed Bylaw April 23, 2025
      • WRPS Board Meeting June 12, 2024
      • October 12, 2022 Region of Waterloo Council Meeting
      • August 18, 2022 Regional Council Meeting
      • June 22nd Regional Council Meeting
      • August 9, 2022 Regional Community Services Comittee Meeting
      • Region of Waterloo Council Meeting April 27, 2022
      • May 9. 2022 -Region of Waterloo Community Services Committee Meeting
      • November 15, 2021: 2022 Plan & Budget Development- Com. of Whole
      • 2022 Budget public input session- Regional Council November 8, 2021
      • November 9th, 2021- Committee of the Whole Regional meeting
      • Proposed November 17, 2021 To Waterloo Regional Council
      • June 26, 2023 City of Kitchener Council Meeting
      • December 6, 2022 Region of Waterloo Meetings
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YOUR CART

Waterloo Police Services Board
meeting June 12, 2024

On the Agenda for WRPS Board meeting as held on June 12, 2024: 
  • ​11.0 Chief of Police Reports
    • 11.1 2024-147: Bi Annual Update on Public Demonstrations and Protests (attached p. 29)
    • 11.2 2024-151: Responding to Homelessness and Addiction in the Region of Waterloo (attached p. 38)
    • 11.3 2024-144: Community Safety and Well Being: Anti-Hate Campaign (attached p. 47)

Hmmm... □#unsheltered https://t.co/8ha4nBcL2P

— Regan Sunshine Brusse (@ReganBrusse) June 13, 2024
  • Media Release : Waterloo Regional Police Service Releases 2023 Annual Report - Waterloo Region Police Services
    • ​2023-Annual-Report (PDF)
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The closure of the Cambridge encampment is no blueprint for success

Written by Unsheltered Campaign
Released ​June 14, 2024
‘Success’ is not the word that comes to mind when people are banished, left with nowhere to go, and overwhelmed by stress and insecurity. Yet, as reported in Wednesday’s Cambridge Today article, at the Police Service board meeting, staff sergeant Jay MacSween used the word ‘success,’ ‘effective,’ and ‘a blueprint to decampment’ to describe the closure of the homeless encampment at 150 Main St. in Cambridge, in August 2023.

As a group of concerned residents and housing advocates, including individuals providing support to encampment residents with direct knowledge of the closure of 150 Main, we are dismayed at the characterization of the displacement of people experiencing homelessness at 150 Main as anything but a failure.

After the closure, most of the residents remained homeless and living outside, and while some people were offered temporary shelter, most spaces were full.

Many residents moved a few blocks away to Soper Park, where they were moved along again just a few weeks later. In the aftermath of these encampment closures, the Region’s commissioner of community services, Peter Sweeney, acknowledged that many people who were at 150 Main continue to live outside. 
A common myth is that people choose to be homeless and/or sleep rough. The reality is that people face many barriers to accessing emergency shelters.
Most shelters will not accept couples or pets, and have strict limits on the belongings people can bring. Shelters cannot accommodate individuals with behavioural issues or complex medical needs.

And importantly, even when a shelter space is available, a person staying in an emergency shelter still does not have a permanent and adequate place to call home.


We cannot police our way to “success” with homelessness.

Police presence at encampment evictions do not help the residents scrambling to pack up all their worldly belongings into garbage bags, offer alternate locations for them to exist without fear of being moved again, and a shoulder to lean on when it all feels too overwhelming.

It is outreach workers, community advocates, mutual aid supporters, and  the encampment community members who provide the help. The police know this too, as staff sergeant MacSween noted that the police’s role of continually moving people along does nothing to solve homelessness.


In fact, police presence can make things worse, as years of distrust and negative interactions cause some people who are homeless to become stressed and defensive. This is especially stressful for some Black and Indigenous unhoused people who continue to experience discrimination and trauma from people in positions of state authority.

The criminalization of homelessness refers to ticketing or arresting people for activities that are directly related to their homelessness, like loitering or trespassing when they have nowhere else to go, sleeping on a park bench, or urinating in public spaces when they are denied access to bathrooms. This creates a vicious cycle, where people lose their job, housing, or support network because of their criminal record, which further entrenches their homelessness and leaves them more susceptible to criminalization again, and again, and again. 


We don’t need a police-driven ‘blueprint’ for responding to encampments. We already know how to do this from a human rights perspective. The National Protocol for Homeless Encampments in Canada outlines the principles for meaningful engagement with encampments from a human rights perspective and how to move towards outcomes that meet the needs of the residents and the broader community.

After the City of Toronto used violence and intimidation to close three encampments in 2021, with little to no positive outcomes for unhoused people in the city and no reduction in homelessness, they tried a different, human rights oriented approach with an encampment in Dufferin Grove Park.

​It took time, patience, and trust building, but many people were able to access permanent housing, health supports, and the emphasis on community relations saw unhoused and housed neighbours share the park for everyone’s benefit. That sounds more like success.
Regional council recently passed the Plan to End Chronic Homelessness. This plan outlines the systems transformation necessary to respond to the homelessness crisis we are experiencing in this Region, much like communities across Canada. The Plan includes a specific action to implement a human rights based approach to encampments.

​For the Region to fulfill its obligations set out in the Plan, they must create a new, transformative blueprint for responding to encampments - one that is built on community, not punishment.

https://t.co/rbl8BABzrB

— Regan Sunshine Brusse (@ReganBrusse) June 21, 2024
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The Unsheltered Campaign is a group of housed and unhoused community members who advocate for year round support, housing, and alternatives to shelters for all unhoused people in Waterloo Region.
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​More Information and research

  • A National Protocol for Homeless Encampments in Canada - ​Make The Shift​
  • Homeless Encampments: Municipal Engagement Guidance -National Working Group on Homeless Encampments​
  • Upholding dignity and human rights: the Federal Housing Advocate’s review of homeless encampments - Final Report​The Office of the Federal Housing Advocate
  • Encampments in Waterloo Region: An Environmental Scan and Recommendations for Best Practices By: Brown et al., Wilfrid Laurier University, Community Housing Policy in Canada, January 3rd, 2022
  • Encampments in Municipal Parks- Canadian Bar Association​​

Media Publications

  • June 14, 2024 - LETTER: Closure of Cambridge encampment no blueprint for success - Cambridge Today​
  • June 14, 2024 - ​Waterloo Regional Police want to take on a supportive role when dealing with homelessness and addiction - The Record News
  • June 12, 2024 - WRPS breaks down the cost of policing demonstrations and protests - CTV News
  • June 11, 20124 - Police spent 18K hours responding to calls at encampments, shelters in Waterloo Region: report - Global News
  • June 10, 2024 - WRPS spent nearly 18,000 hours responding to calls near shelters and encampments in 2023 - CTV News
  • June 10, 2024 - Regional police unveil new spending stats for protest, demonstration deployments - City News Kitchener
A Better Tent City
​
(via Civic Hub)
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More pages "around here":

  • Blog post: As we begin to hold some of the more difficult conversations surrounding unsheltered lives​​
  • ​​March 9, 2022 Waterloo Police Services Board Meeting
  • September 27, 2023 - Region of Waterloo Council Meeting & Soper Park Eviction 1.0​​​
  • ​​The Criminalization of Homelessness​​
  • Connecting with our WR Municipalities and Local Democracy

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