Ten Year and Anita Place Tent Cities: Security for the homeless, sites of struggle for us all: By the Editors

For those who are evicted and displaced, tent cities have become spaces of survival and also of resistance. By coming together and creating tent cities, homeless people are refusing to accept laws that make homelessness illegal. They are refusing a society that doesn’t recognize them as humans. Tent cities refuse the government’s attempt to make homelessness and homeless people invisible. Tent cities expose the everyday crisis of homelessness.

By creating tent cities homeless people are building social systems of support and solidarity, not otherwise provided by the government. At tent cities homeless people collectively pool and share their skills and resources; build life-saving community and relationships; watch out for each other and respond to emergencies during the overdose crisis; and establish temporary sanctuary from daily displacement, police brutality, and the constant criminalization of homelessness.

Still, more often than not, the response to tent cities has been to dismantle them and evict the people living there. The City most commonly argues that tent cities aren’t safe for residents in their justification for breaking them up  but in reality displacement destroys the stability, safety, and security that homeless people have created in the tent city, leaving them, once again, without a safe place to reside.

This is a special edition of the Volcano newspaper, with news from the two tent cities that are leading a legal and political fight for homeless people’s security and power over the private property rights of Cities: Ten Year Tent City in Vancouver, and Anita Place Tent City in Maple Ridge. Together these two tent cities are a base for legal and political claims for the power of homeless people, and exceptional social spaces where working class and Indigenous people in cities can unite in a common fight against the economic and policy forces of displacement that affect us all.

The Volcano printed this newsletter as a special print edition to distribute at the two camps, and at the BBQ organized to celebrate 10 Year Tent City’s Supreme Court victory against the City of Vancouver’s application for an injunction to displace the camp.

Read the articles from this newsletter here:

Celebrating after the Supreme Court victory

Voices from 10 Year Tent City

Ten Year Tent City beats Vancouver in Court! Supreme court decision affirms the value of homeless people lives over the City’s property rights: By Maria Wallstam

Saving lives, a sense of pride, and trans women’s safety at 10 Year Tent City: Affidavits from the defendants against the City of Vancouver’s failed injunction attempt


Voices from Anita Place Tent City

Anita Place tent city forging a new anti-poverty politics in Maple Ridge: Housed and homeless Maple Ridge residents marching together for housing and against hate: By Ivan Drury

Rally calls for Maple Ridge to lift eachother up and reject bullying, anti-homeless hate, and vigilante violence: Speeches from Anita Place defense rally

Appendix: Tent City documents

Founding Declaration of Anita Place Tent City, Maple Ridge 2017

Four Principles for a Tent Cities Movement: Drafted at Super InTent City Victoria, February 2016

You might also like