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Dartmouth councilor speaks out after assault over homeless shelter

A local councillor does not want to see temporary homeless shelters popping up at public parks.

Dartmouth Centre Councillor Sam Austin released a statement on Tuesday after an assault at Starr Park.

Austin says it happened on Monday morning after a neighbour knocked on the door of a temporary shelter, which was dropped off at the park on Saturday without the city’s permission.

“A neighbour knocked on the door of the Starr Park shelter and the exchange ended very badly,” Austin says in the statement posted to Twitter. “The neighbour, a senior, was attacked by a shelter occupant and had to be taken to hospital with significant injuries, including broken bones.”

In a release on Monday, Halifax Regional Police said a 65-year-old man who lives in the area confronted a 31-year-old man about a structure that had been illegally built in the park over the weekend.

Police reported the older man was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Austin says these structures are dangerous as they offer no heat, power, running water, or additional community support.

He believes community groups should work with the city to create safe spaces.

“The alternative path is demonstrated by the Catholic Church,” Austin says. “Over the last several months, HRM and the Catholic Church have worked together to approve safe crisis shelters for installation on church property. The church shelters meet the building code, have heat and electricity, and have access to water/toilets on-site or through nearby church buildings. Occupants are supported by church congregations or service providers and results have been quite successful, with almost no complaints or issues from any of the church sites.”

Meantime, the volunteer group who installed the shelter at Starr Park is pushing back against the concerns.

Halifax Mutual Aid has taken to Twitter to say they were saddened to hear the news and that rising tensions point to the continued need for safe housing.

“As we have always said, Halifax Mutual Aid will continue to build crisis shelters as long as people need them,” the group says in a Tweet.

The group says volunteers and shelter occupants were threatened while trying to set the shelter up.

“We will also continue the policy of occupant’s choosing the location of their crisis shelter, as was the case for Starr Park,” the group says.

Halifax Mutual Aid believes the solution is “safe, dignified housing.”

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