Couple who lived in B.C. garden shed still homeless
CBC News
Posted: Dec 18, 2012 5:51 AM PT
Last Updated: Dec 18, 2012 9:11 AM PT
Dean Schaffler and his partner have money to pay rent, but can't find a place in Kelowna that will also let them keep their three dogs. (Brady Strachan/CBC News)
Related
Related Stories
A homeless couple in Kelowna, B.C., who had to leave the garden shed they were living in after a city inspector forced them out are still without a place to rent.
In October, a woman rented her backyard, store-bought, sheet-metal garden shed to Dean Schaffler and his partner — and their three dogs — for $200 a month. Electrical power was supplied to the shed through a single extension cord.
But the City of Kelowna fined the woman $500 for ignoring a warning and continuing to let the couple and their pets live there, saying it was unsafe.
“It was sufficient. We had insulation, we had a heater, we had a TV,” Schaffler said.
That was two weeks ago, and Schaffler, his partner, Mary-Lynn Coleman, and the dogs have been back on the street ever since.
“Well, I tell ya, it's not an enviable position to be in. But we're hoping something shows up,” Schaffler told CBC News.
'This is no existence'
The couple spent the summer living in the open air and now receive $540 a month in housing assistance, but Schaffler said they’re having trouble finding a place for two people and three dogs at that price.
“I'd be in there so fast it would make their head spin. It would be remiss of me not to, right? Like, this is no existence, you know?”
Schaffler, his partner and dogs were happy live in this shed for several weeks. (Stephen Fleming/City of Kelowna)Schaffler said the animals are well-behaved.
“They're all wonderful, as you can see. They're very tame.”
The group has been spending their days on the sidewalk with cardboard sign on their shopping cart saying “desperately need place to rent.”
There is room for the couple and their dogs at a local shelter, but the animals would have to stay in a separate room, which distresses them, said Schaffler.
Schaffler said he's not giving up on his animals, even if it means sleeping outside as the coldest months of the winter approach.
With files from the CBC's Brady StrachanShare Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Canadian on EI shut out amid foreign worker influx
- A jobless Canadian IT professional who is collecting employment insurance is upset because he now suspects several recent jobs he applied for went to temporary foreign workers. more »
- Prince Andrew in Victoria for Highland Games
- Prince Andrew is in Victoria this weekend, as Scots celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Highland Games. more »
- Thief robs, injures woman in wheelchair
- Police in Agassiz are searching for a purse-snatcher who robbed a woman in an electric wheelchair. more »
- Rob Ford should resign if allegations true, councillors say
- Two councillors say that Toronto Mayor Rob Ford should resign from office if unproven allegations that he was caught on tape smoking crack cocaine turn out to be true. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Dellen Millard's farm near location of unknown remains
- Police searching the farm of Dellen Millard, the 27-year-old charged with first-degree murder after the remains of Ancaster, Ont., man Tim Bosma were discovered, have found other remains near the property, but it's unclear if they are human or animal. more »
- Can the Senate fire a senator?
- An expert on parliamentary rules says the Senate has the power to turf a senator from the chamber, as long as a majority approves the expulsion, and as long as there is cause. more »
- Nahlah Ayed: Vote-wary Iranians mull Ahmadinejad's successor
- Iranians go to the polls in less than four weeks to choose a new president. The reform movement is still smarting from its bitter defeat four years ago, but the jockeying for power is no less intense, Nahlah Ayed reports. more »
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Nigel Wright has resigned as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff, following revelations he wrote a $90,000 cheque to repay living expenses claimed by Senator Mike Duffy. more »
- Vancouver man attacked, killed in Costa Rica
- Canadian on EI shut out amid foreign worker influx
- Prince Andrew in Victoria for Highland Games
- East Vancouver residents in 'guerrilla gardening' campaign
- Thief robs, injures woman in wheelchair
- Public raising funds to buy alleged Rob Ford crack video
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- Rob Ford should resign if allegations true, councillors say
- Holmes Hydro can proceed without environmental assessment

