Friday, June 13, 2025

Time to Rethink Urban Suburbia

 🌆 Time to Rethink Urban Suburbia: Why Tiny Homes and Outdoor Living Can Help Us Heal

By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

I don’t have a home right now — but I still have a voice.
And I’m using it to say something loud and clear:
The current housing and support system in BC is broken — and it's hurting more than it helps.

🚨 I've Seen the Crisis Firsthand

This week alone, I had to call for help twice for people overdosing. I watched a young girl so drugged she could barely move at a Surrey bus stop.
Surrey is bad, but the Downtown Eastside is a full-blown warzone.
It’s not a metaphor. It’s real.

People are dying.
People are disappearing.
And many of us feel ignored, trapped, or unsafe.

So I’m asking:
Why do we keep throwing people with mental health issues, trauma, and addiction together in long-term housing?
It doesn’t work. It retraumatizes people. It keeps people sick. It costs lives.


❌ 10 Things Wrong With the Current Approach:

  1. One-size-fits-all housing — people with vastly different needs are lumped together.
  2. Unsafe environments — violence, overdose, and fear are common in social housing.
  3. Lack of autonomy — people don’t get privacy or the dignity of their own space.
  4. Trigger exposure — recovering people are surrounded by active addicts or smoke.
  5. No fresh air, no purpose — most people are stuck indoors, disconnected from nature.
  6. Overworked staff — support workers are underpaid, burned out, and can’t keep up.
  7. No community building — there’s no real effort to foster healthy relationships or healing spaces.
  8. Addiction care is missing — people need M.A.S.H. units, not hallways with Narcan.
  9. People fall through cracks — the “system” isn’t designed to adapt to real human stories.
  10. No forward path — there's no support to move out, move on, or contribute again.

✅ 10 Better Ways We Could Do It:

  1. Build tiny home villages — with privacy, security, and dignity for each resident.
  2. Create sober zones — for people who can’t be around drugs or alcohol.
  3. Design outdoor communities — gardens, art spaces, kitchens, and shared meals.
  4. Bring in Indigenous teachings & Elders — healing comes from land, tradition, and connection.
  5. Prioritize fresh air & activity — build places for biking, walking, and working outdoors.
  6. M.A.S.H. Units for overdose & crisis care — rapid response mobile addiction and mental health clinics.
  7. Empower peer leadership — people with lived experience can guide better than outsiders.
  8. Train & pay community caregivers well — the frontline workers deserve support too.
  9. Offer skills training and micro-jobs — gardening, food sharing, repairs, teaching youth.
  10. Support art, creativity, storytelling — let people be seen, heard, and empowered.

🛠 This Isn’t Radical — It’s Common Sense

We’re not asking for mansions or million-dollar condos.
We’re asking for safety, community, and healing.

Give people space.
Let them breathe.
Stop cramming trauma into a single building and calling it a solution.

The old model has failed. Let’s not keep repeating it. It’s time to rethink suburbia, reclaim our humanity, and offer real alternatives.


🕊 Final Thought

Some people do get better — they move forward.
Others need long-term support, or even hospital settings. That’s okay.
But putting everyone together and hoping for the best? That’s not care — that’s chaos.

Let’s start small.
Let’s build tiny.
Let’s build better.


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