CTV News Reality Check: Why reopening Riverview wouldn't solve B.C.'s mental health crisis
Every time British Columbians are rattled by an act of random violence like last week’s shocking homicide and maiming in downtown Vancouver, there are calls to reopen the Riverview Psychiatric Hospital, but that’s not the solution some think it is.
In fact, there continue to be treatment beds for 289 people in several buildings at the 244-acre site in Coquitlam, amidst dozens of buildings in various stages of collapse. The Red Fish Healing Centre and two lodges operated by Coast Mental Health, plus supportive housing, provide in-patient services and treatment for those with severe mental illness, addiction, or both.
With public safety and the handling of mentally ill people likely to become key election issues, CTV News is reexamining the factors that make the “reopen Riverview” idea much more complicated than it seems; these issues are explored in-depth in our six-part series that aired last year, Riverview in Focus.
Demolition by neglect
Former Riverview CEO Alex Berland oversaw the site from 1998 to 2000 and is surprised there continues to be discussion about opening and using buildings that have sat empty for decades, some of which are literally collapsing.
“The oldest buildings are 100 years old and if you're going to spend millions of dollars to renovate old buildings... why would Riverview be the place to do that?” he asked.
Last week, B.C. mayors renewed calls to do just that.
Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart, for his part, has been doing so constantly since the hospital formally closed in 2012. The site has since seen “demolition by neglect,” as he describes it.
Riverview saw its peak occupancy in the 1950s as traumatized soldiers brought the resident population to 4,700. The early years of the hospital were dark, with lobotomies, forced sterilization, and electro-shock treatments in addition to forced manual labour. By the 1960s, a new era of psychiatric drugs saw the population begin to decline as people were able to return home and live relatively normal lives in the community.
More detained under the Mental Health Act now
Further downsizing in the 1990s under the New Democrats and the full closure under the BC Liberals in 2012 saw waves of displaced patients going where they could afford to live on social assistance, with many ending Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside where they were preyed on by drug dealers.
There’s a common misperception that since Riverview Hospital’s formal closure, few people are institutionalized due to mental illness. But the advocacy group Health Justice says in B.C. “we detain and involuntarily treat far more people now than we ever did at the height of Riverview’s institutional population.”
Dr. John Higenbottam, who was clinical vice president of Riverview, and Marina Morrow, a York University professor who documented Riverview’s closure while at SFU, both pointed out the safety net that was supposed to help patients post-treatment was insufficient, with supportive housing a major shortfall – a pattern that continues to this day.
“People want simple solutions and they're usually wrong,” said Berland. “It's an enormously complex problem so it makes any kind of solution extra difficult.”
Uncertain future
CTV News spent months trying to get an update on the NDP government’s plans for the site, renamed Sumiqwuela several years ago, which were quietly halted last year.
In an interview last March, Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon insisted “we feel the urgency” of moving forward with plans for the site, but that they were taking the time needed to discuss the site’s future with the Kwikwetlem First Nation, who expressed confidence in the agreed-upon process.
Last week, a ministry spokesperson emailed a written statement from Kahlon, who raised the issue of a civil claim brought by the KFN in 2016 which the province was committed to a negotiated agreement rather than an adversarial court process.
“This is complex, sensitive work that takes time and we are committed to doing the work in a good way,” the statement said.
Berland gives Premier David Eby credit for “doing many of the right things," including speaking about the options around involuntary treatment and overseeing the expansion of peer support workers. But he emphasized thatany option is going to be complicated an expensive, with pros and cons to decentralized care as well as a consolidated, expanded campus of care at the old Riverview site, if that’s what ultimately happens.
“We have a saying in public health: Until we build a fence at the top of the cliff, we need ambulances at the bottom,” he said. “I believe we are not going to solve the basic problem and we need to help society accept that there are many varieties of mental illness.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
DEVELOPING Hurricane Milton strengthens into a Category 5 storm. Florida orders evacuations
Florida's storm-battered Gulf Coast raced against a Category 5 hurricane Monday as workers sprinted to pick up heaps of appliances and other street debris left over from Helene two weeks ago and highways were clogged with people fleeing ahead of the storm.
'Selfish billionaire': Chip Wilson's mansion vandalized after political sign erected outside
Days after a political sign was erected outside Chip Wilson's Vancouver mansion, the waterfront property has been vandalized with graffiti.
Hurricane Milton has been upgraded to a Category 5 storm. What does that mean?
Hurricane Milton quickly intensified to a Category 5 storm on Monday, reaching the most dangerous rank on what's known as the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
Two people injured in apparent road rage incident, shooting in Toronto
Two people are in hospital after they were chased and shot at in what appears to be an act of road rage before eventually flipping their car while trying to escape, police say.
Disgraced Winnipeg football coach sentenced to 20 years in prison for sexual assault
A disgraced Winnipeg high school football coach convicted of sexual assault and luring will spend 20 years behind bars.
Sammy Basso, longest living survivor of rare rapid-aging disease progeria, dies at 28
Sammy Basso, who was the longest living survivor of the rare genetic disease progeria, has died at the age of 28, the Italian Progeria Association said on Sunday.
As Hurricane Milton intensifies, is Disney World still open?
Despite Hurricane Milton evolving into a Category 5 storm, Walt Disney World Resort remains open to the public and will operate as normal. However, the park announced Monday a few closures in an abundance of caution.
Senior charged after minivan set ablaze outside Vancouver City Hall
The day after a minivan was set ablaze outside Vancouver City Hall, a 78-year-old man has been criminally charged.
Canadians head for higher ground as threat of Hurricane Milton nears Florida's Gulf Coast
The contents of entire homes have been kicked to the curb in one south Tampa neighbourhood. Piles of garbage bags, broken trees and waterlogged furniture serve as reminders of how unforgiving nature can be.