Downtown Eastside

COVID spreading in Vancouver’s downtown eastside

By Jen St. Denis, The Tyee, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

The president of a union that represents hundreds of workers in the Downtown Eastside says not enough is being done to inform residents and  workers about rising levels of COVID-19 exposure in the neighbourhood.

‘Wave’ of cases in Downtown Eastside

The Downtown Eastside  appeared to have few cases through the spring and summer, but recent  weeks have seen an increase in the community that’s home to many of the  city’s poorest and most vulnerable people.

The Union of BC Indian Chiefs warned today of a “wave” of cases in the neighbourhood, with cases confirmed among residents and frontline  workers. The UBCIC called for transparency from Vancouver Coastal Health  and for an “urgent, transparent, public and culturally appropriate  action plan that provides immediate safe and secure housing units for  people who test positive and need a place to recover.”

The UBCIC is also calling for “a commitment  to publicly report any cases in the DTES so that residents of the  densely populated neighbourhood can take extra precautions for their  health and safety.”

Lack of information

Andrew Ledger, president of CUPE 1004, told  The Tyee that the lack of information on cases is affecting people who  live and work in the neighbourhood.

“We hear anecdotally that a resident or  maybe a peer worker has tested positive for COVID-19,” he said. “And  people get anxious and nervous, knowing that they may have been in  contact with that individual. But the employer’s position is clear that  they’re not going to share any information — they’re deferring to the  health authority.”

The union represents close  to 700 employees of PHS Community Services, a social service agency that  runs 19 supportive housing and shelter buildings and also operates  several safe drug consumption sites.

Micheal Vonn, the CEO of  PHS, confirmed that the number of cases is increasing. “I would say very  recently is when we’re starting to get that uptick,” she said.

Ledger said PHS has refused to tell  employees when someone at their workplace has tested positive. That’s  led to people learning of possible exposure through word of mouth or  social media posts, fuelling anxiety, he said.

Following the lead of public health officials

Vonn said PHS is following the lead of  public health officials and leaving contact tracing and decisions on  whether to inform residents, workers and clients up to Vancouver Coastal  Health.

Sometimes that means Vancouver Coastal  Health is informing people directly if they’ve been in close contact  with someone who tested positive for the virus. In other cases, the  health authority is posting a paper notice.

Vonn said she did not know whether  employees who are on days off or away from the site are being informed  that they may have been exposed. Vancouver Coastal Health says notices  about potential exposure are required to “be shared with staff,  informing them of the exposure and instructing them to self-monitor for  symptoms.”

All employees should be routinely checking themselves for symptoms, she said.

Residents vulnerability

Ledger said he’s concerned Downtown  Eastside residents aren’t being properly informed of the risks,  especially given their vulnerability and the difficulty in doing contact  tracing to curb the spread of the virus.

Employees can work at several neighbourhood  sites, increasing the risk of transmission, he said. And many clients  use the services anonymously, making contact tracing impossible.

Dr. Brian Conway, the head of the Vancouver  Infectious Diseases Centre, says early testing shows that COVID-19 was  likely more prevalent than previously thought in the Downtown Eastside  and among unhoused people in the city’s downtown core.

Conway has started testing people to see if  they have antibodies to the virus as part of a research project to  determine whether COVID-19 spread more widely among vulnerable people  than was previously known.

“There are a few tests that are positive  for the antibody. So in places where we thought there had been  absolutely no exposure to COVID, there probably was,” Conway told The  Tyee.

“And this will be a major priority for us going forward — figuring out what happened, and we’ll analyze it.”

Residents and community  advocates feared an outbreak of COVID-19 in the Downtown Eastside would  be devastating, with most residents suffering from one or more serious  health conditions. But instead of a COVID-19 outbreak, a wave of  overdose deaths hit the neighbourhood as services were halted or reduced  in response to the pandemic.

COVID cases

But while there hasn’t yet been a reported  COVID-19 outbreak, the virus is still very much in the Downtown  Eastside. Vancouver Coastal Health is warning of exposure at the West  Pub, a bar in the West Hotel, between Aug. 20 and 30. Warning notices  have also been reported in several other SRO buildings in the Downtown  Eastside and Chinatown.

Vancouver Coastal Health declined to give  The Tyee a list of all exposures in the neighbourhood. The authority  also initially did not post information about the West Pub exposure on  its website as it does with exposure events at other businesses.

After The Tyee published a story that included criticism of that decision from advocate Judy Graves,  Vancouver Coastal reversed course and added the West Pub exposure, which  it calls “low-risk” on its website.

Earlier in the year, there were also  several cases of COVID-19 in the Downtown Eastside at shelters run by  First United Church and the Salvation Army, Conway said. The small  number of cases spread from two former inmates of Mission Institution,  which had one of the worst prison outbreaks of COVID-19 in Canada.

“People who had been released from  incarceration had nowhere to go… and ended up at these places with  very low thresholds for emergency housing,” Conway said.

Top photo credit: Social distancing is impossible for many unhoused people who spend days and nights in Vancouver’s crowded Downtown Eastside. – Photo by Jesse Winter.