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Advocates continue to push for a shelter in the Oceanside area, with the Regional District of Nanaimo and the City of Parksville recently agreeing to send letters of support to BC Housing for a 10-bed shelter pilot project. (Image Credit: (Christpher Katsarov/The Canadian Press))
shelter space

‘Bigger than one winter:’ Oceanside dry shelter advocates get RDN support letter

May 27, 2026 | 4:20 PM

PARKSVILLE — Advocates for Oceanside’s unhoused keep pushing for more local shelter space, with a pair of municipalities lending their voices in support.

Shayla Day, chair of the Oceanside Homelessness Task Force (OHTF), recently made presentations to both the City of Parksville and the Regional District of Nanaimo (RDN) regarding a 10-mat dry shelter pilot project for the area.

Speaking at the Tuesday, May 26 RDN board meeting, Day said this idea is about more than the 10-mat shelter: it’s about helping people before a crisis hits in an area lacking the necessary resources.

“This is about being able to build a local structure for Oceanside, a practical access point for people who are already here, already struggling, and already falling through the gaps. Every community has people facing poverty, mental health struggles, addiction, disability, housing loss, family breakdown, crisis, and one of Oceanside’s largest barriers, isolation.”

The RDN board approved sending a letter to BC Housing expressing their support, in principle, for a six-month, cold-weather dry shelter with up to 10 beds, subject to appropriate requirements being met.

A similar motion to what Parksville councillors approved during their May 20 meeting, where coun. Sean Wood was also appointed as a liaison to the OHTF.

Day said they’re working on confirming a possible location for the shelter, which would accept clients through a booking model, while a good neighbour agreement would be a requirement.

She said the goal is not to warehouse people, but rather help them get off the street to a stable environment.

“We can keep spending money reacting after people fall apart, or we can start investing in prevention. This pilot is not enabling, this is not abandonment. It is structure, dignity, it is accountability, it is access, it is prevention. This is bigger than one organization, this is bigger than one municipality, this is bigger than one winter.”

Day is also the founder of DayHomes, an Oceanside non-profit providing basic needs such as food, clothing, and personal hygiene products.

Different people and community groups have been pushing for a permanent shelter for the Oceanside unhoused for several years, without success.
Different people and community groups have been pushing for a permanent shelter for the Oceanside unhoused for several years, without success. (Image Credit: File photo/NanaimoNewsNOW)

RDN Area F director Leanne Salter was not in favour of the letter of support, saying 10 beds aren’t going to fix the problem.

“I have serious concerns. I get the desperation, and I hear it, I hear it all around the table…but that’s not the fix. We need a real fix, and a real fix has to come from the province because they’re not going to get the finances and they don’t have the qualifications…this is a political, ‘don’t I look like I’m doing something’. That’s what this is.”

Salter said their extreme cold weather centres, activated and funded by the province when it’s forecasted to be -4 degrees or lower for the next 24-hour period or below zero with a weather warning in place, is “the best we can do” for now.

In past years, the Oceanside Community Church, located in Electoral Area F near Errington, and the Qualicum Christian Fellowship Church have both been activated during cold snaps.

Day was considering the Oceanside Community Church as the location for the 10-mat shelter, but an RDN staff report notes a shelter would be against the church’s current zoning bylaw, and is not accessible by BC Transit.

Nanaimo Mayor Leonard Krog was in favour, and said it’s “one of the most conservative” approaches he’s heard on this issue in a while.

“There are people who are just homeless. They may not be suffering from deep addiction or serious mental health issues, they’re just homeless, and what is proposed is a shelter that is a regular place for them to live until such time as housing is available.”

Directors Wallace, Bob Rogers, Salter, Ian Thorpe, Tyler Brown, Parksville Mayor Doug O’Brien and Lantzville Mayor Mark Swain all voted against the motion to advance discussions with BC Housing for a seasonal winter dry shelter for the Oceanside region.

According to the RDN’s website, the only options currently listed for people in Oceanside needing shelter is to contact the Salvation Army Soup Kitchen or the Society of Organized Services (SOS), both in Parksville.

However, neither provides a permanent overnight shelter, except for women and their children fleeing abuse through the Parksville-Qualicum Haven House.

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