Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Victoria police investigating a sudden death in Beacon Hill Park

Part of Victoria’s Beacon Hill Park was closed Wednesday morning after the discovery of a body – Mar 3, 2021

Victoria police are appealing for witnesses and information about the “sudden death” of a woman in Beacon Hill Park Wednesday morning.

Story continues below advertisement

Police confirmed they were called to the park just before 6 a.m. along with paramedics.

A person had been found unresponsive and was later confirmed deceased.

Police are asking any pedestrians, cyclists or drivers who were on Dallas Road between Cook and Douglas streets between midnight and 6 a.m., Wednesday, to contact them.

They’re also looking for any video shot in the area during the same timeframe.

 

Story continues below advertisement

The park has been the site of a homeless camp for some time now, although it is not clear at this time if the deceased person is in any way connected to the camp.

On Tuesday, the City of Victoria filed a petition in the Supreme Court of B.C. asking for clarification on whether the park can be used by people without homes for temporary sheltering.

The city said in a statement it is posing this question to the court as the park is held in trust by the city and it is unclear how they should operate the space under the Trustee Act.

“Chronic homelessness, a global health pandemic that has closed shelters, mental health and addiction supports stretched beyond capacity – these are modern realities that did not exist in 1882 when the trust was created and we need clarity on how this trust affects people’s rights today,” Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps said in a statement.

Story continues below advertisement

The city said the application is not an action against homeless people using the park but neither the 1882 Crown grant nor the Public Parks Act, 1876, identifies all the uses to which Beacon Hill Park may be put by the public, only that it be preserved by the city as a public park.

Advertisement
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article