People trying to keep warm accidentally set Surrey store on fire, prompting calls for better shelters - Action News
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British Columbia

People trying to keep warm accidentally set Surrey store on fire, prompting calls for better shelters

After Ben's Appliances was accidentally set on fire by people who were trying to keep warm overnight, store owner Matt Notting is calling on the City of Surrey for better housing options.

Homeless advocates say Surrey desperately needs thousands of below-market rental units

A firefighter can be seen putting out flames at Ben's Appliances in Surrey on February 24, 2022. (Matt Notting)

A Surrey, B.C. mansays his family-owned business was severely damaged by a group of people trying to keep warm overnightby lighting an outdoor fire in February.

Now he's calling on the city to do more to support those without shelter to avoid future incidents.

"The city can do a better job at making both businesses and people feel more secure at night," saidMatt Notting, the owner of Ben's Appliances. Hisgrandfather opened the Surrey storein 1962."We know that we don't have enough resources for people at night."

CBC has reviewed CCTV footage of the fire, which started Feb. 24 behind Notting's store on 104th Avenue. In the video, a group of people can be seen building a fire inside a stack of tires. The tires catchfire and, despite efforts of the people to put it out, the flames spreadto the building.

Half of the store was destroyed, and Notting is still working to replace thedrywall, ceilings and insulation.

It's not the first time a local business has been scorched by fire fromthe same cause. On Sept. 23, 2017, the Hockey Shop Source for Sports, located near Surrey Central SkyTrain Station, went up in flames. Aperson without a fixed addresswas charged with one count of arson.

Notting says the business community hastried manyways to keep their shops safe, including stepped-uppatrols by Surrey RCMP and local by-law officers, and hiring night security guards. But the frequency of these fires have only gone up.

Andin some cases, they make things worse for the city's most vulnerable.

'Just moving the problem'

Kerry Dean, who used to be homeless, says security guards who wake people sleeping on the streetand make them move to a different area are not the solution.

Kerry Dean says security guards making people sleeping on the streetmove to a different location is not the solution. (Kiran Singh/CBC)

"You'd think they'd be more focused on solving the problem, not just moving the problem, because it's not like the person's going to go home. He's homeless," said Dean.

According to the city's planning and development department, Surrey currently has 1,162 beds for people experiencing homelessness, including temporaryand permanent shelter beds, and transition housing.

The B.C. Non-Profit Housing Association counted 644 homeless people in Surrey in 2020, but observers say the current number is likely much higher due toCOVID-19 and flooding that displaced people in the Fraser Valley last year.

Keir Macdonald, CEO ofSurrey-based charityPhoenix Society which is dedicated to helping people experiencing homelessness and addiction,sayswhile the city has made some progressin helping people who arehomeless, ithas also lost several temporary and modular housing complexes in the past few years.

One example, Macdonald said, isthe demolition of 46temporary housing units for low-income people at Nickerson Place in Whalley.

Keir Macdonald, CEO at Phoenix Society, says while Surrey has built some new homes for people experiencing homelessness, more have been demolished in the past few years. (The Phoenix Society)

The city also rejected plans in 2021 fora six-storey affordable housing complex in South Surrey calledHarmony Apartments.

"It is incredibly difficult to create those opportunities, to have the land, to have the funding lined up, to actually meet zoning requirements. And then, for whatever reason, for it not to be zoned and approved by city council ... It really is a bit of a slap in the face for those trying desperately to bring forward below-markethousing options in this community," Macdonald said.

A November 2021 report by city staffindicated Surreyneedsthousands of below-market units or subsidizedhousing, butMayor DougMcCallumand other members of the Safe Surrey Coalition on council sent the report back, calling it too negative.

Dean, who has struggled withaddiction since he was 12,saysthe closure of community kitchens and drop-in centres has broken connections forged among homeless people in the past, worsening metal health problems.

"The opposite of addiction is connection, so people just need to be connected," Dean said.


CBC British Columbia has launched aSurreybureauto helptell your stories with reporterKiran Singh. Story ideas and tips can be sent tokiran.singh@cbc.ca.