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DTES response launched to protect community from COVID-19

“The situation is serious and it is urgent. In a neighbourhood where space, food, supplies, and everything is shared, if we have one infection, it could decimate this entire community."
dtes
Photo: Dan Toulgoet

A coordinated effort has been launched to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. 

Called the DTES Response, the group aims to activate networks in the community to create a stop-gap plan for the most urgent needs of the most vulnerable in our communities. Right now, the group is mobilizing resources and coordinating operations to address the challenges. 

The group has created the DTES Response Fund to raise $100,000 for immediate needs like food, mobile phones, and money for loss of income. 

Roughly 15,000 people are at risk in the Downtown Eastside, and 3,000 of them are homeless. What's more, 4,700 people in the DTES live in Single Room Occupancy hotels (SROs). Under these conditions, self isolating and social distancing is extremely difficult. SRO tenants share bathrooms and many do not have access to soap, making regular hand washing impossible. SROs do not have kitchens, soup kitchens have shut down, food banks have limited stock, and disruptions in informal economies creates loss of income. Additionally, many SRO tenants don’t have cell phones, so in self-isolation, they can’t stay connected, communicate, or get necessary information. 

“The situation is serious and it is urgent. In a neighbourhood where space, food, supplies, and everything is shared, if we have one infection, it could decimate this entire community," says Wendy Pedersen, Organizer, DTES SRO Collaborative Society. “Living conditions are already dire, and this is only going to get worse if we don’t act now.” 

It will benefit:

  • DTES SRO Collaboration (SRO-C),
  • Western Aboriginal Harm Reduction Society (WAHRS),
  • Friends of CCAP (Carnegie Community Action Project),
  • and Overdose Prevention Society (OPS)

“We’ve been seeing community amenities closing,” local organizer, Erica Grant says, “and on the weekends, there is no food available.”

Individuals, foundations, and corporations can help right now by:

  • Not visiting the DTES: we are practicing social distancing and want to minimize the risk of introducing COVID-19 to the population.
  • Donating money: to purchase food, mobile phones, and to transfer funds to those in need.

Find out more information here