Brandon bylaw changes aimed at offences like loitering, panhanding could target homeless people, critics fear - Action News
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Manitoba

Brandon bylaw changes aimed at offences like loitering, panhanding could target homeless people, critics fear

A new proposed bylaw on "community standards" coming before city council in Brandon, Man.,next week hascritics worried it could harm unhoused people. The amendments would alter fines for some offences andadd somenew ones, such as fines targetingloitering or panhandling.

'Community standards' bylaw targets offenses like loitering and panhandling

A man crouches down on a city sidewalk, holding  a hat in his hand, while the shadow of a person walking past him is seen.
A file photo shows a man panhandling. Critics of proposed bylaw changes in Brandon, Man., fear the changes could hurt the city's most vulnerable, because of vague definitions for proposed finable actions like loitering or panhandling. (Tom Hanson/The Canadian Press)

A new proposed bylaw on "community standards" coming before city council in Brandon, Man.,next week hascritics worried it could harm unhoused people.

Ifapproved, the amendments to Brandon's compliance bylaw would alter fines for some offences andadd somenew ones, such as fines targetingloitering or panhandling.

Brandon Mayor Jeff Fawcett says amendments to the bylaw, set to receive third reading Monday, have been in the works since around 2018.

The changes were prompted by concerns members of the public brought tothe city and the Brandon Police Service, he said.

"There wasn't an urgency" to the changes initially, he said, which he described as "housekeeping" amendmentsto the city's bylaw.

"Over time they started cleaning things up and said, 'OK, well, should we be doing some improvements?'" Fawcett said.

A man sits at a desk looking to the right.
Brandon Mayor Jeff Fawcett says the city's goal is to see its bylaws enforced with compassion and to adjust enforcement as needed. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

Critics of the bylaw warnit could hurt the city's most vulnerable, saying vague definitions for proposed fineable actions like loitering or panhandling could unfairly impact unhoused people in the province's second-largest city.

Bylaw needs clarity:renewal corporation co-ordinator

Megan McKenzie, the research and project development co-ordinator for the Brandon Neighborhood Renewal Corporation, worries the changes could see people who arechronically homelessfined repeatedly.

"We need to be really clear about what is loitering, and who are we trying to address with that, and ensuring that people do have spaces," she said.

"The big part of that is making sure they have homes," said McKenzie.Otherwise, "you're essentially criminalizing homelessness without providing the resources for people to have other alternatives."

A sign says no loitering.
If approved, the bylaw amendments would alter fines for some offences and add some new ones, such as fines targeting loitering or panhandling. (Benjamin Aub/CBC)

The number of people without homes in Brandon is increasing dramatically, she said,and the complexity ofneeds including those related to mentalhealth andsubstance use isincreasing in tandem.

From January to September 2019, for example,104 people accessed the city's only overnight shelter.

From January to May 2023 alone, that number was270.

She also worries the proposed bylaw could disproportionately persecute Indigenous people, who makeup the majority of unhoused people in the city, according to statistics fromBrandon's Safe and Warm Shelter.

Brandon University sociology professor Christopher Schneider saysthe proposed amendments as written should be scrapped,and the people who would be impacted by these proposed changes including Indigenous and racialized people should be consulted on any future amendments.

That consultation would help the city better understand the underlying conditions that need to be addressed, and how those issues are giving rise to some social problems in the city.

"The bylaw is so vague that basically anything could be interpreted as'loitering,'" by a responding officer, "and they can remove all of those people and the problem," Schneider said.

That may satisfy business owners who don't want people loitering in front of their shops, he said,"but does not in any concrete way address or serve as a long-term solution to helping those in need."

Wayne Balcaen, who was chief of the Brandon Police Service when the new bylaw was drafted and first presented to council,is also listed as one of its authors.

Balcaen, who isseeking the Progressive Conservative nomination in Brandon West for this year's provincial election, declined to speak with the CBC.

The Brandon Police Servicesaid no one was available to speak whenCBC requested comment.

Fawcett says there is some vagueness in the bylaw, "because hard and fixed doesn't necessarily always work."

The city's goal is to see thebylaws enforced with compassion and to adjust enforcement as needed, he said.

"It just gives [enforcement officers]an opportunity to talk with people to say, 'You know what, we're not gonna have you do this here,'" Fawcett said.

A man wears a toque standing in the cold.
Ward 4 Coun. Shaun Cameron says the proposed bylaw will be a 'living document' that can be adjusted as needed. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

Ward 4 Coun. Shaun Cameron, who sits on the Brandon Urban Aboriginal Council, says council's goal was to make the bylaw as fair as possible, using a mix of education and enforcement to ensure people feel safe in the city.

"Council and the city staff both view this as a living document, in the sense that we're able to make amendments and edit throughout time," Cameron said.

"We want to view it as something that continues to grow and change."