Vancouver Sun

Street cleaners facing pink slips

City mulls whether to continue project that employs disabled people

- KIM PEMBERTON kpemberton@vancouvers­un.com

The service is not something you can just abandon. I wonder, what is the city’s plan when we leave? DAVID POLLITT STREET CLEANER

David Pollitt loves his job cleaning the streets of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, removing used condoms, needles and other garbage, but he has been told he will be out of work at the end of this month.

Pollitt said he and other street cleanup crew workers from the Coast Foundation Society were told the Great Beginnings Clean Street Project, which employs people with disabiliti­es to keep the sidewalks and lanes clean in the Downtown Eastside, will be cut since funding is no longer available.

The funding was initially provided by a provincial grant but that ended in 2012, said Albert Shamess, director of waste management for the city.

Shamess said the city has been paying for the program for the past year and is now reviewing whether to continue it. He said there has been no announceme­nt to cancel the program and it will be up to the city to determine whether grant money will be made available to continue it.

The city’s website brags about the clean streets program as “an excellent example of social sustainabi­lity in action. Work crews benefit from a greater sense of pride and self esteem developed through employment that makes a positive contributi­on to their own community.”

“We do a good job down there. It’s needed. It’s a mess down there,” said Pollitt, who has been working on the crew since 2009, one year after the project started as part of a $ 10- million provincial initiative to beautify city streets for B. C.’ s 150th anniversar­y and in anticipati­on of the 2010 Winter Olympics.

“The service is not something you can just abandon. I wonder, what is the city’s plan when we leave? What happens to all the needles, used condoms and garbage? The city claims it’s a green city but you can’t have something green if it’s not clean.”

Pollitt said on a typical day the crew picks up anywhere from 15 to 30 needles, or about 4,000 every year. He added it’s also not unusual for them to find large garbage bags of trash ripped apart in the middle of a sidewalk, which they clean up.

When he heard how city representa­tives were “basking in the praise” of television mogul Oprah Winfrey’s comments — how she couldn’t find trash in the city — he was irritated knowing the cleanup crew’s contract is ending March 31.

“I wondered what Oprah would say if she came on a tour with us?” he said.

Pollitt added he’s particular­ly concerned that school students at Lord Strathcona elementary will no longer have the crew working to keep their sidewalks adjacent to the school free of trash and dangerous used needles.

“A mother not long ago stopped me near the elementary school. She was pushing her little girl in a buggy and she wanted me to show her daughter a needle so her little girl would know what not to pick up. The mother told me some little kid had poked himself the previous week,” he said.

Pollitt said, up until six months ago, the crew was operating seven days a week with six people but recently it was cut back to five days with fewer people.

Darrell Burnham, executive director of the Coastal Foundation Society, said he was told the program was being cut for financial reasons but he wondered why, since it is does so much for the community on a budget of $ 50,000.

“From our point of view it was a win. The city invests and the community benefits. It allows disabled people to work in the community and helps them in their recovery.

“All of the workers are on disability benefits and that extra money meant a lot to them — even a couple of hundred on that level of income is huge,” Burnham said.

“They were finding great satisfacti­on and they were very dedicated.”

He said the workers, who have mental health issues, work two- to fourhour shifts and are paid minimum wage.

 ?? WAYNE LEIDENFROS­T/ PNG ?? Mike Blair, left, Tim Heisler and David Pollitt sweep garbage from the streets of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.
WAYNE LEIDENFROS­T/ PNG Mike Blair, left, Tim Heisler and David Pollitt sweep garbage from the streets of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

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