UN Refugees getting evicted in Ottawa

  • Thread starter Thread starter MW 002
  • Start date Start date
  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
https://www-aljazeera-com.cdn.amppr.../8/16/dd18840740b54646b25cabd721a1ec24_18.jpg
Heron Gate mass eviction: 'We never expected this in Canada'
About 150 homes in one of Ottawa's most diverse and affordable communities are expected to be torn down in coming months

by Jillian Kestler-D'Amours
21 Aug 2018
Ottawa, Canada - Binto Mohamed hasn't had a good night's sleep since May. That's when she received a letter telling her that her family of 10 had until September 30 to find a new home.

"There's a piece of me missing, because of the stress," she says, standing in the middle of her dimly-lit kitchen, the air thick and sticky in the overpowering August heat.

Mohamed, a mother of eight, knows her house is far from perfect.

The kitchen sink is about half full of dirty, brownish water; the drain hasn't worked for the past year, and despite putting in a request to have it repaired five months ago, it's still blocked.

Without a working sink, dirty pots and pans sit unwashed on the stovetop, which itself is covered in a crusted splatte

The bathroom light fixture has been broken for months, while the outer glass of a double-paned window is missing off the first-floor room Mohamed's disabled 18-year-old daughter sleeps in, in a hospital bed. In the winter, cold air seeps in, making the teenager ill.

But this home is all Mohamed has ever known since she moved to Canada with her family from their native Somalia in 2014.

They are now one of more than 100 families facing eviction in Heron Gate, a neighbourhood in the south end of Ottawa, in what a local tenants' rights group says is the "largest forced displacement in Canada" in recent history.

ba9543fbc94b4412a0b45d87744d8072_18.jpg

For years, Heron Gate tenants have complained of general lack of upkeep and maintenance services of their units [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

Several families have found new homes, but despite seeing other places and scouring the listings every day, Mohamed hasn't found anything affordable that can accommodate her large family and its needs.

"I came to Canada thinking it was an escape, only to realise it's like torture," she says in Somali through a translator.

"People are playing with our lives," adds her husband, Jamale Ibrahim.

"Winter and the cold is coming," Mohamed says, "and we have nowhere to go."

Company defends plan
Heron Gate is one of Ottawa's most diverse communities, home to a large number of residents of Somali and Arab backgrounds. It comprises a mix of townhouses, medium-sized buildings and tall apartment towers.

n late May, the landlord - Timbercreek Communities, a large real estate company that bought up large swaths of the community - announced plans to demolish about 150 units here.

The company, which operates in 27 cities across Canada, said the townhouses are no longer viable and it gave tenants until September 30 to find alternative housing.

The required notice period under the law in the province of Ontario is at least 120 days.

Under the provincial Residential Tenancies Act, a landlord can issue eviction notices for the purpose of demolishing a property or conducting extensive renovations, among other reasons.

In an email to Al Jazeera on August 10, Timbercreek said 70 percent of the affected tenants in Heron Gate have found new places to live.

https://www-aljazeera-com.cdn.amppr.../8/16/1b2adeca80c04c2d88e53eef5fdc5555_18.jpg

The company is offering displaced tenants three months' rent, as well as an additional $1,530 ($2,000 Canadian) compensation, up from an original offer of $1,150 ($1,500 Canadian), to move. It is also negotiating reduced rates with moving companies, and employing a relocation team to help tenants find other properties, the company said.

"Timbercreek is going beyond the requirements of the law in providing relocation assistance," its statement read.

"Timbercreek's vision has always been for Heron Gate to be a diverse and sustainable community. A project of this magnitude, however, requires that tenants relocate during the revitalisation process. We will offer all impacted residents the right to return to Heron Gate when the redevelopment is completed."

Homes in poor condition
However, several families who remain in Heron Gate say they're struggling to find alternative housing that meets their needs and doesn't exceed their budgets.

Mumina Egal, a member of the Heron Gate Tenant Coalition, which advocates on behalf of the residents facing eviction, said families of eight or nine people are being told to look at two-bedroom apartments, much smaller than what they need.

One resident of Heron Gate who spoke to Al Jazeera said she paid about $1,000 ($1,305 Canadian) for a three-bedroom townhouse. She said she visited similarly sized apartments after getting her eviction notice, but the rents are in the $1,380 ($1,800 Canadian) to $1,530 ($2,000 Canadian) range, plus utilities.

I came to Canada thinking it was an escape, only to realise it's like torture."

BINTO MOHAMED, HERON GATE RESIDENT FACING EVICTION

A recent article in the Ottawa Citizen bore the headline, "Rising rents and cutthroat competition". The newspaper reported that "Ottawa's residential rental market has recently become red-hot, with demand and prices ballooning and vacancies increasingly scarce".

Last year, the city had a 1.7 percent rental vacancy rate, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, and the average rent for a two-bedroom townhouse was $925 ($1,209 Canadian), the Citizen reported.

In Heron Gate, the tenant coalition has also criticised Timbercreek for failing to keep the units in good condition.

44379ceea4394b118f1a5688d0859071_18.jpg

Timbercreek says it 'continues to maintain Heron Gate units' [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

For years, tenants have complained of bug infestations, water damage to their ceilings, inadequate rubbish pick-up, and broken windows and floorboards, as well as general lack of upkeep and maintenance services from the company.

Asked to comment on the complaints, the company said it "continues to maintain Heron Gate units and quickly respond to repair requests".

But a resident, Amina, who didn't give Al Jazeera her last name out of fear of reprisals, keeps her food in closed rubbish bags because her kitchen is overrun by cockroaches.

A handful of bugs scurry into the cracks of the cupboards, as she opens them, one by one, to illustrate the problem. She has more than half a dozen sticky anti-cockroach traps around the room, in the corners and in a space between the fridge and a cabinet; each was full of insects.

"What we're living right now is not a life," the mother of four says.

Uprooting a support network
Abdullahi Ali has been through this type of thing before.

he 64-year-old was forced to relocate from a home in another section of Heron Gate in 2015 after Timbercreek slated it for demolition.

At that time, dozens of families were displaced when about 80 townhouses were razed. Today, a crane and a construction site stand in their place, soon to be transformed into "three, six-storey multi-residential buildings".

Now, the four-bedroom townhouse Ali moved into after that first eviction is also set to be demolished, and his household of nine people - Ali, his wife, six children, and a granddaughter - has been forced to look for a new home once again.

He currently pays $1,225 ($1,600 Canadian) in monthly rent, plus utilities.

"They didn't tell us they intended to demolish [this home, too]," Ali tells Al Jazeera, just outside his front door, the construction site where his previous home stood towering over his right shoulder in the distance.

If they had, Ali says he wouldn't have stayed in Heron Gate.

"It's Canada, it's a highly respected nation for human rights. This is worrying ... This is something we never expected to happen in Canada," he says.

Evicting the residents of Heron Gate does more than strip them of the roofs over their heads, he adds.

For many, especially new immigrants who don't speak English and lack a local support network, the community is a lifeline.

"We support each other. This is our culture, and this is how our community works," Ali says.

It's Canada, it's a highly respected nation for human rights. This is worrying ... This is something we never expected to happen in Canada.
ABDULLAHI ALI, HERON GATE RESIDENT FACING EVICTION

After the demolition notices were issued in May, the Heron Gate Tenant Coalition went door-to-door, collecting data from the households affected.

Eighty-nine percent of the nearly 600 residents facing eviction are people of colour, the group found, while 44 and 24 percent are of Somali or Arab background, respectively.

"A lot of them are dependent upon the community via translation work, for moral support, for babysitting while they go out to find jobs or go to English class," says Egal, who grew up near the neighbourhood.

"Taking them away from this neighbourhood and moving them to the east end or moving them to the west end - where they don't have those community ties for the day-to-day necessities of life - is extremely debilitating," she tells Al Jazeera.

3bc25faa9e0749ec9623a8418c60e0dc_18.jpg

Liban Mohamed has so far not found another home that is affordable [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

Liban Mohamed is one such person. The 29-year-old moved to Heron Gate in 2015, five years after he first landed in Edmonton, in Western Canada, from his native Somalia.

Currently studying for his high school equivalency certificate, he pays $380 ($500 Canadian) a month to rent a house with two roommates. Theirs is one of the homes subject to demolition.

He hasn't found another place yet, and Mohamed says he can't imagine living anywhere else.

"My community is here," he tells Al Jazeera. "It's very stressful. It's not easy to move."

More time to find alternatives
If the residents that remain in Heron Gate refuse to move by September 30, Timbercreek can go to Ontario's Landlord and Tenant Board to apply for a formal eviction order. It must then apply to the city for permits to demolish the units.

The company says it will "design a community that fits the needs of the people in the community", but it doesn't have a plan in place yet for the type of units that will replace the townhouses.

Because landlord and tenant issues fall under provincial laws in Ontario, the City of Ottawa says it can't intervene in the eviction process. The city only gets involved once a landlord applies for a demolition permit or files a development proposal.

d7e9ce41a1be4645ba74c0426c24c30d_18.jpg

About 10,500 families in Ottawa are currently on a subsidised housing wait list [Jillian Kestler-D'Amours/Al Jazeera]

A spokesperson for Mayor Jim Watson said his focus has been "to encourage Timbercreek to increase compensation to affected households, and to provide families with more time to look for a new home".

"Mayor Watson sought, and received reassurance from Timbercreek representatives, that the company is focused first and foremost on helping families relocate and not on the eviction process," Livia Belcea told Al Jazeera in an email.

However, the need for affordable housing far exceeds availability in Ottawa.

About 10,500 families are currently on a subsidised housing waiting list, which gives them access to "rent-geared-to-income assistance and associated housing benefits", said Shelley VanBuskirk, director of the city's housing department.

Wait times are four years or more, on average, she said in an email.

Additionally, low vacancy rates, coupled with high demand in the private rental sector and higher rental costs, "are placing additional demands on the wait list for social housing and for affordable housing options", VanBuskirk said.

Back in Heron Gate, residents have asked Timbercreek for more time – as much as a year's leeway - to find other places to go.


The residents who remain are in a "desperate situation", says Abdullahi Ali. They called on the city to do more to support the people facing eviction.

Daniel Tucker-Simmons, a lawyer representing some of the residents, said a request for accommodation was sent to Timbercreek's lawyer and to Mayor Watson.

These mass evictions are having a differential, a discriminatory, impact on my clients because of their race, because of their ethnicity, because of their religion.
DANIEL TUCKER-SIMMONS, LAWYER REPRESENTING SOME HERON GATE RESIDENTS

They're asking that if parts of the neighbourhood need to be demolished, that the current tenants receive more relocation assistance, and be guaranteed a right to return to units with similar rents once the redevelopment is finished. It also asks that units be preserved if they can be.

The request is currently being considered, Tucker-Simmons said. If he doesn't receive a response, he said the complaint could be sent to the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal, which adjudicates on alleged human rights code violations.

"These mass evictions are having a differential, a discriminatory, impact on my clients because of their race, because of their ethnicity, because of their religion," he said.

While they wait to see what happens next, a sense of anxiety runs through every home and every family, says Ali's wife, Saido.

We don't say hi [to each other]. We say, 'Did you find a house?' … Our minds [are] always [on this]."


TL;DR: a bunch of tax payer funded Somalians are getting evicted from their ghetto neighbourhoods and are upset about it.
 
The window might be on a landlord to fix but a clogged sink is a $5 CVS plunger to fix.

Though I'd be willing to bet my bank account that the maintenance requests for "the sink is clogged" got replies of, "use a plunger you stupid cunt."

I’d be willing to bet Techpriest’s uneaten hat that when a plumber snakes out this kebab’s drain that it’s full of vegetable scraps, bones, fruit seeds, and all kinds of other shit that she shoved down the drain (and shouldn’t have.)
 
I’d be willing to bet Techpriest’s uneaten hat that when a plumber snakes out this kebab’s drain that it’s full of vegetable scraps, bones, fruit seeds, and all kinds of other shit that she shoved down the drain (and shouldn’t have.)

Oh no doubt. My dad used to rent out apartments and the sheer number of pipes he had replaced because things being dumped down the drain could probably lay pipe for a small town. And this is average IQ Americans doing it. I can't even begin to imagine what literal retards put down drains.
 
It's really cute how journalists love to keep the definition of "journalist" as "Liar". Call it what it is, a bunch of illiterate, lazy immigrants who live in a shanty town being too useless to look after themselves and blaming everyone else for their own problems. Not rocket science and also not lying
 
I used to work as a super for a apartment complex. I would bet that the issue is not as simple as just a clogged drain. These units will have a combined return. They typically get backed up over time. You cannot just snake this out from a single unit.

Per why do not the residents just fix the building....they can't get permits to do the work if they wanted to.

With the cost of housing in Canada, it is not surprising the difficulty in finding new location. I think most Americans do not realize how cheap housing is generally in the US compared to much of the world in terms of take home pay.
 
That does make it much worse. It also means some of the people currently with 8 or 9 kids originally came here with only a few, birthed several in Canada, and a social worker never told them to look into birth control, or that social services are a finite resource.

Having >5 kids in poverty puts you in an absolute buttfucked position if anything ever goes "wrong" in your life. There's no adequate accommodation for these people, except busting a hole in the wall of a duplex and charging them for only 1 unit. Obviously it wouldn't be a nice shiny new duplex, the family would resent it, and the deterioration saga would begin anew.

Canada has a federal child benefit which is paid to everyone with kids up to a certain income threshold ($120k CAN a year or more), plus provincial tax credits for low-income families. 8 kids from a mom who doesn't work nets about $3950 of tax-free child benefit per month. Let's say that there's a husband around who makes minimum wage of about $30k a year: working income tax credits, rental assistance, and rebates from sales tax boost that family up to $52,350 in welfare every year on top of that one income. That's before you get to programs like food banks, daycare subsidies, etc. The government pays this because it's still cheaper than trying to create shelter space for 8 kids. If you're a woman who doesn't speak English married to a righteous Somali dude who won't let his woman work around kuffars, you have no other way of increasing your income besides your vagina.
 
Sooo... if I understand correctly, they're complaining because the housing they are currently in is manky and won't/can't be fixed, and they're complaining even more because their current manky housing is being torn down so they can get better, non manky housing in the future? Is this right? Because no matter how I look at this, I see a pack of whiny little bitches that refuse to be satisfied with anything.
 
Sooo... if I understand correctly, they're complaining because the housing they are currently in is manky and won't/can't be fixed, and they're complaining even more because their current manky housing is being torn down so they can get better, non manky housing in the future? Is this right? Because no matter how I look at this, I see a pack of whiny little bitches that refuse to be satisfied with anything.

That's somalians. I have a pet theory that the stripes from their slaver days hasn't fully washed out yet. They were huge on slavery and saw many tasks as beneath them, so they had other people do it for them and with time that taught them to be helpless and incompetent while fostering a strong ethno-nationalist elitist attitude, it wasn't that long ago the Brits(I think) went in and put a stop to their slavery by force. Now they're coming to the west and making demands that their host nation needs to do this and that for them while they themselves often just sit around, chew khat, drink sugary tea and complains about being inconvenienced by the local kuffar.

There's also a legend I'm not sure that I believe, but a friend of mine swore that he worked with a super hot Somalian woman.
 
That's somalians. I have a pet theory that the stripes from their slaver days hasn't fully washed out yet. They were huge on slavery and saw many tasks as beneath them, so they had other people do it for them and with time that taught them to be helpless and incompetent while fostering a strong ethno-nationalist elitist attitude, it wasn't that long ago the Brits(I think) went in and put a stop to their slavery by force. Now they're coming to the west and making demands that their host nation needs to do this and that for them while they themselves often just sit around, chew khat, drink sugary tea and complains about being inconvenienced by the local kuffar.

There's also a legend I'm not sure that I believe, but a friend of mine swore that he worked with a super hot Somalian woman.
Well, if I'm not mistaken Ayaan Hirsi Ali is of Somali origin. So it's plausible.

Now there's someone who probably facepalms every time she hears about exceptional Somalis. Imagine being a lovely, intelligent crusader for women's rights (particularly agitating against FGM) and you're the same nationality as a pack of barely-sentient human shaped broccoli stalks.
 
There's more than one kind of Somali. In particular the population is divided into two broad groups. One is Afro-Asiatic speaking and has been there for many millenia. The other is Bantu speaking and was a comparatively recent arrival. They're pretty distant genetically.
 
I like how the article writer is implicitly expecting you to sympathize with these people but instead you just end up getting annoyed over their entitled attitude. Fix your own fucking sink, Binto.
That's somalians. I have a pet theory that the stripes from their slaver days hasn't fully washed out yet. They were huge on slavery and saw many tasks as beneath them, so they had other people do it for them and with time that taught them to be helpless and incompetent while fostering a strong ethno-nationalist elitist attitude, it wasn't that long ago the Brits(I think) went in and put a stop to their slavery by force. Now they're coming to the west and making demands that their host nation needs to do this and that for them while they themselves often just sit around, chew khat, drink sugary tea and complains about being inconvenienced by the local kuffar.

There's also a legend I'm not sure that I believe, but a friend of mine swore that he worked with a super hot Somalian woman.
Some of the women in these pre-war photos aren't too bad-looking
https://www.quora.com/Was-the-Muslim-world-more-secular-in-the-1970s-than-now/answer/Ilwaad-Isa
It's almost hard to believe they're from the same country as the walking tents I sometimes see where I live or see being interviewed on TV
 
Last edited:
There's more than one kind of Somali. In particular the population is divided into two broad groups. One is Afro-Asiatic speaking and has been there for many millenia. The other is Bantu speaking and was a comparatively recent arrival. They're pretty distant genetically.

For a long time they've been hard at work eradicating the Bantu, a broad group of people but like you say they're distinct from the Somali, and they were also their primary source of slaves and seen as inferior. Their ethnic and genetic separation comes down to the usual thing that separates the masters from the slaves, fraternization weren't allowed.

Some of the women in these pre-war photos aren't too bad-looking
https://www.quora.com/Was-the-Muslim-world-more-secular-in-the-1970s-than-now/answer/Ilwaad-Isa
It's almost hard to believe they're from the same country as the walking tents I sometimes see where I live or see being interviewed on TV

Those picture of the old Somalia looks like the pre-revolution Iran, or even Syria. It's a real bummer. Beirut became a punchline in many jokes but before that it had a good reputation as a Mediterranean resort with french trappings(hospitality, service, food, things like that) and gamblin'! James Bond was gambling and whoring around there in some movie, before the civil war.

And the burkas don't do the Somalian women any favors. A typically Somalian facial feature is the big, very prominent, but not sharp, cheekbones. Slap on some baby weight, squeeze that face out through a burka and it makes them look like chipmunks. That shit is wrapped tight, you've probably seen women that has their phone in their headscarf making it 'hands free'.
 
I like how the article writer is implicitly expecting you to sympathize with these people but instead you just enjoy getting annoyed over their entitled attitude. Fix your own fucking sink, Binto.Some of the women in these pre-war photos aren't too bad-looking
https://www.quora.com/Was-the-Muslim-world-more-secular-in-the-1970s-than-now/answer/Ilwaad-Isa
It's almost hard to believe they're from the same country as the walking tents I sometimes see where I live or see being interviewed on TV
How bad to you have to fail to turn dubai into the gaza strip?
 
Mother of eight. Father of seven. Family of nine. I sense a pattern.

This is actually one of the problems with the Sudanese refugees I encounter. They often have 3 or 4 kids when they land here, but then they continue spitting out more kids despite the fact that they're dependent on social housing and food banks. Unfortunately, our payments for children tend to encourage this - once you get past 4 kids, the government is paying you a tax-free amount which equals or exceeds what someone in a low level job would receive in wages after tax.
 
I used to live across from Somalians who allowed their deck to become overrun with trash before they were evicted.

And yet, lefties want us to believe these people will be future doctors and engineers.

I lived near a family of them too. Their front door was open 90% of the time, and they hung one of those imitation ornate Islam blankets over the doorway. Everything outside of their room smelled like burning orange peels. They had 20 kids that constantly went missing, prompting the police to knock on everyone's doors at 2AM constantly. They had a weird sex-offendery white guy living with them who may or may not have something to do with their missing kid problem. And they pulled furniture out of dumpsters, giving everyone bedbugs.
 
Back
Top Bottom