What a treat!

I do not have all the details involved in the preparing and serving of the New Year’s Day feast at the Abbotsford Salvation Army, so if I get details wrong I apologize.

My understanding is that sisters, members of our Sikh community, wanted to serve a meal for the hungry. They were looking at Christmas, but Andy Kwak, the new man in charge at the Salvation Army suggested New Year’s Day would be better. Great suggestion Mr. Kwak and thank you for allowing the use of the meal centre.

Family and friends of the sisters pitched in to help and from all the people who were there preparing and serving the food, the sisters have a lot of family and friends.

They served up lots of great East Indian fare. Enough so that people were waddling out the door unable to eat a single bite more. Many left with sandwiches and/or ‘takeout” for supper that night.

Keeping it simple I will merely say that I heard from many people how much they enjoyed and appreciated the food, expressing their Thanks.

What a great way to start out the New Year; and the food wasn’t bad either.

This is the kind of spirit and community initiative we need to make a start at ending homelessness, addiction and hunger in Abbotsford.

Truly a great, an energizing beginning for the New Year.

Thank you all very much. For the food, the thoughtfulness, your company and your generosity.

Thank you.

New Recovery House Policy

Mr. John Smith still has not answered the most important question concerning the recovery house policy.

Mr. Smith and council have failed to answer: “when you close a ‘bad’ recovery house, where are the people/residents going to go”?

I support closing bad recovery houses, probably not for the same reasons as Mr. Smith, but I do support closing them. But, and isn’t there always a but with a people problem? But I felt, and still feel, that Mr. Smith and council need to have a plan in place so the people in those recovery homes that will be closed have a place to go – rather than mindlessly adding 100 – 200 more homeless to the overcrowded, overrun streets of Abbotsford.

Since it appears the Mr. Smith and council have followed their usual policy with taxpayer questions, they did not listen and ignored the question, I want to pose something to think about for the citizens of Abbotsford who will be affected by the new recovery home policy.

Before celebrating the closing of a recovery house in your neighbourhood – where are the people who live in the house going to go?

Recovery houses were a market response to the demand for affordable housing. When you close a recovery house there is nowhere else the residents can afford to move to.

You may not have liked a recovery house in your neighbourhood but are you prepared for the ex-residents seeking shelter in you carports, crawl spaces, sheds or trees around your/their neighbourhood? With nowhere else to go the people are going to stay in the neighbourhood they know – your/their neighbourhood. That is their comfort zone and where they will want to stay.

Perhaps any newly displaced residents of recovery houses can find rides to Mr. Smith and other councilors homes and neighbourhoods?

After all they have been aware of the question of where displaced residents of recovery homes will go for over a year and … done nothing to address this question/aspect of the new recovery homes policy.

Cache

Another luxury I always took for granted was having a safe place to leave my ‘stuff’. This point was driven home when a friend, who was staying at the Salvation Army shelter where they require people to take their belongings with them when they leave for the day, heard that the Rail Road Police had given the acquaintance she was storing her stuff with during the day a limited time to move his camp. Shortly after this I saw someone pushing a shopping cart full of his belongings along and recalled the fellow I had met just a short while ago, who had been displaced when the brick plant downtown decided to level the patch of bush he was camped in, pushing his salvaged belongings along in a shopping cart. Later in the same day I saw my acquaintance pushing a shopping cart of her stuff along to the place of a friend who had offered to store it for her. The picture most of us associate with those we see pushing a shopping cart full of stuff along is that they are crazy in some way or another – a favourite depiction of television and films. Now, I do not claim that all these people are the mentally healthiest; after all I admit I found myself in my current circumstances due to mental health issues, just that using a shopping cart is an entirely reasonable choice under the circumstances. It is just that society has decided to attach a stigma to this mode of transporting your belongings. Once you are homeless you do not, as a general rule, have a lot of possessions and your time on the street tends to whittle what you have down even further. Remember that at this time of year extra clothing and bedding can be important to you living through the night. If you do not want to chance losing it you need someplace safe to store it or a way to carry it with you. Carrying requires something with room for your belongings and an easy way to move it. Hmmm? Wheels, big basket, rack, and a handle for pushing it – sounds like just what is needed – sounds like a shopping cart.

Now I can think of several different approaches to filling this need for safe storage that do not require large cash outlays, only the goodwill to want to address the need. The real point here is that the next time you see a ‘crazy’ person pushing a shopping cart remember that it is an intelligent response to that person’s situation and needs. If you want to cut down on the number of people pushing shopping carts and various other contraptions full of their belongings around town, you need to be as intelligent in your response to the situation. Address not the effect (the shopping carts etc) but the cause – the need for storage. I have, all too often, seen ill considered responses to issues related to or raised by homelessness increase the problem or worsen some other aspect of it. Knocking down the bush to move the homeless along = more homeless sleeping in the open on the streets. Answers are easy – it is asking the right questions that requires intelligent thought and achieves results by addressing the root causes, not just symptoms.