Raucous meeting ends with modular housing unit for New Westminster
Police were called to meeting, which went on for six hours
After a stormy, six-hour public hearing on Tuesday night, New Westminster city council unanimously approved a modular housing unit in Queensborough.
The decision came around 1 a.m. Wednesday, after a meeting attended by 250 people, many of whom opposed the project, which would provide 44 units of housing.
Several police officers were called to the meeting to keep the peace.
Similar housing projects — which aim to house homeless people —have drawn controversy in Vancouver, Richmond and Maple Ridge.
Nadine Nakagawa, who attended to support the unit, said "tempers definitely flared."
"People were very heated about it. I've attended a number of public hearings before ... this was the most tense hearing I've been at," Nakagawa said.
"Certainly, it was not comfortable, and didn't feel like the community came together at the end."
'What is the appropriate place?'
The neighbourhood's MLA, Liberal Jas Johal said residents are concerned about the location of the modular housing.
"Police were called because it was just local residents, soccer moms and dads, who really aren't happy with the fact that this modular housing unit is being moved into Queensborough," he said.
"They're concerned about it going in right in front of a school and a community centre."
But Nakagawa, who worked at a homeless shelter for women in New Westminster for years, said she knows "how it was to find housing for women at that time."
"What is the appropriate place? We've heard that throughout the area, that this is never the appropriate place," she said.
With files from Justin McElroy