Stop Passing the Bundle — A Message to Those in Charge
I’m sitting here in Mexico, after three months of trying to rest, reset, and reclaim some sense of balance.
And yet—stories from back home keep finding me.
Not because I went looking.
But because they are everywhere.
Today, I read about someone in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside being pushed out of their home. A person living with serious health challenges. A decade sober. Holding onto two dogs that are clearly family. And now facing what sounds like a so-called “renovation” eviction—while their unit is already being advertised online for double the rent.
Alongside that?
Years of reported harassment.
Discrimination tied to Indigenous identity.
Barriers placed—literally—blocking access for someone using a cane.
Unsafe living conditions.
And now, a deadline.
Three weeks.
This is not just a housing issue.
This is a systems issue.
This is a dignity issue.
To Those in Charge
To housing authorities.
To policymakers.
To those overseeing tenant protections, human rights, and public health:
What is happening on the ground does not match what is written in policy.
Because if protections were working, people like this would not be pushed to the edge of survival.
If systems were accessible, someone this overwhelmed wouldn’t be asking strangers online what to do next.
If enforcement was real, landlords wouldn’t risk posting units for double the rent while claiming renovations.
So I ask:
- Where is the enforcement?
- Where is the urgency?
- Where is the protection for people with disabilities and Indigenous tenants facing discrimination?
Because right now, it feels like the burden keeps getting passed down—to the very people least able to carry it.
The Weight of Witnessing
I want to be honest.
I am learning not to pick up every bundle I come across.
Not because I don’t care—but because carrying everything breaks people, too.
And many of us have been breaking quietly for years.
But witnessing still matters.
Naming what’s happening still matters.
And saying “this is not okay” still matters.
What Needs to Change
This is not complicated, even if it’s uncomfortable:
- Enforce existing tenant protection laws—consistently and visibly
- Investigate bad-faith evictions quickly
- Protect tenants facing discrimination with real consequences
- Prioritize accessible, supportive housing for people with health challenges
- Stop allowing vulnerable people to fall through administrative cracks
A Line That Shouldn’t Be Crossed
When someone is considering giving up their pets, their home, and possibly their will to keep going—this is no longer a policy discussion.
This is a crisis.
And systems that respond too slowly—or not at all—become part of that crisis.
From a Distance, But Not Silent
I may be far away right now.
But distance doesn’t erase responsibility to speak.
What I can do is this:
Witness.
Write.
Refuse to normalize what should never be normal.
And remind those in charge:
People are not problems to be moved around.
They are lives to be protected.
I can care deeply—without carrying everything.
But those in power?
You are supposed to carry this.
And right now, you’re not.
—
Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)