Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

After life on the street, a Christmas tree meant home

When the photo above was taken in 2017, Jack Gates had been living in Vancouver’s Regent Hotel for three years. For much of that time, Gates had been fighting his landlords, the Sahota family, in court or at B.C.
Jack Gates
Jack Gates in his SRO room at the Regent Hotel in 2017. He now lives in Strathcona. Photo by Jennifer Gauthier.

When the photo above was taken in 2017, Jack Gates had been living in Vancouver’s Regent Hotel for three years. For much of  that time, Gates had been fighting his landlords, the Sahota family, in  court or at B.C.’s Residential Tenancy Branch over the terrible living  conditions in the single-room occupancy hotel.

Photographer Jennifer  Gauthier and I had come to the Regent to talk to Gates about the city’s  failure to make it a safe building to live in. Gates had taken us on a  tour of the building, showing us a loose fire escape and talking about  his fear of what would happen if there was a fire. We’d seen a rat  scampering down the hallway, doors boarded up with plywood and  overflowing garbage bins in the corridors.

It was just a few weeks before Christmas,  and even though his room was tiny — a typical 100-square-foot SRO room —  Gates had put up a full-sized Christmas tree, decorated with candy  canes and tinsel. I asked Jen to try to get a photo of him with his  tree.

I’ve been thinking about that photo a lot  lately. Gates and everyone else who lived in the Regent moved out in  2018, when the city declared the building unsafe to occupy. City  councillors voted to start a process to expropriate the Regent and  another hotel owned by the Sahotas, the Balmoral, because they had been  so badly neglected.

The city finally took ownership of the Downtown Eastside buildings this fall, and plans to redevelop  them into housing affordable to people on disability and social  assistance payments.

Gates says he put up the  tree to make his room at the Regent feel like home. He recalled how when  he first arrived at the hotel his room was filled with mattresses that  were visibly crawling with bedbugs. He had to clean out the room  himself, with the help of Pine-Sol, a mop and a broom bought at the  dollar store.

“When I moved into the Regent, I didn’t care — I was going to make it a home,” Gates said. 

Gates’s journey to the Regent started with  being evicted from an apartment at Fraser and Broadway while he was in  hospital. He ended up living on the street, sleeping in a tent behind  the Tim Hortons at Broadway and Main. One night, he said, some police  officers stopped him as he was foraging for something to sell in the  alley, drove him to the Downtown Eastside and left him there.

When Gates first moved into the Regent, he  didn’t have a bed — for about a month, he slept on the floor with his  head cushioned on his jacket. Often his room was freezing, because there  was no heat or hot water.

By 2017, when Gates was speaking to  reporters and advocating for himself and other tenants, his room was  carefully organized, with food and other items stored in clear plastic  bins and the bed neatly made — although the mice still chewed holes in  the foam mattress, which he brought to City Hall at one point to show to  city council.

His Christmas tree that year, he remembers,  came from a lot at 12th Avenue and Main Street. Wendy Pedersen, a  tenant organizer who worked with residents of the Regent and Balmoral,  picked it up in her car and drove it back to the Downtown Eastside.

“When I was younger, I never really had a  tree,” he said. “I was free from drugs and alcohol and I wanted to have a  Christmas I would remember.”

Gates remembers he was the last one to move  out of the Regent, and he wanted to make sure the housing other tenants  had been offered was better than what they’d all experienced in the  Sahotas’ SROs.

“I didn’t want to see anyone live like they were living in the Regent,” he said.

Gates says he was excited by the news of  the city taking ownership of the hotels because of what it means for  people who need housing. Too many people in the city are homeless, he  said, living on the street in the cold and rain.

“I know now they’re going to build some  housing,” he said. “I lived on the street for a couple of months and I  got double pneumonia. No matter if someone says they don’t mind being  out there, there are too many things that can happen.”

Gates now lives in a social housing  building in Strathcona, just a few blocks from where he used to live. He  got his tree up on Monday, and his bachelor apartment is filled with  gifts he plans to hand out in Chinatown and the Downtown Eastside. 

“Every place I’ve had since I sobered up, I  made it home,” Gates said. “No matter the condition it’s in — so I can  welcome people in.