Category Archives: Homeless

Numbers of Hungry grow in Abbotsford.

I allow myself one lotto 6/46 ticket whenever the pot gets over $10 million. An inexpensive chance to dream … and you never know – somebody has to win it. But even though the pot was $15 million I did not by a lottery ticket, instead spending my $2 on purchasing a $2 food bank donation coupon at Safeway.

It just seem a wiser way to spend my ‘mad money’ considering how demand for meals and food have soared over past weeks.

Disturbing is not a strong enough word to describe the flood of new faces, new people, looking for food and a place to sleep at night that has been occurring. When you stop to consider this trend, frightening is a more accurate word to describe the implications.

The new people have swollen the numbers of people in need to the point that those who provide meals have literally run out and had to scramble to find something to serve in order that everyone got fed at least something.

Those serving meals find themselves needing to provide more meals, but facing the reality of less donations and generosity from the public.

The Abbotsford Food Bank, facing the reality of more hungry people and the effect the economy has had on donations, has had to reduce the amount of food it gives to individual clients. Help is needed to fill the shelves as we head into summer when traditionally donations to the food bank go down. Going into this summer the shelves are looking bare at a time demand is quickly climbing. Abbotsford’s Food Bank could use a drive such as that being undertaken in Vancouver to restock the Food Bank’s shelves.

As a community we all should look at how we are spending our money to see if we cannot find a few dollars we could spend being generous to the growing numbers of people in our community in need of generosity simply to eat.

Why not in Abbotsford also? Part 2

 

 

The quote Ms. Lila Rauh used from my letter of June 12, 2009 in her Abbotsford Times letter of June 16th (see Below) was taken out of context, not only losing the point being made but implying a different meaning entirely.

“While Abbotsford City Council has been paying lip service to the lamentable lack of affordable housing, hiring social planners and forming advisory committees – City Councils in Chilliwack and Mission have been supporting and standing behind supportive affordable housing projects in their cities.”

Nowhere is mention made of Abbotsford City Council paying for affordable housing. The affordable housing being built in Mission and Chilliwack is not being paid for by those Councils. The contribution of the Councils of Mission and Chilliwack is not money but supporting and voting for projects. Contrast this with Abbotsford where Council is saying the right things but not acting to support affordable housing initiatives.

It does no good for senior governments to provide funds for housing when Abbotsford City Council is not prepared to hold up its end of the affordable housing equation.

The provincial government brought $22 million to the table to cover the costs for building 2 housing projects, with an additional yearly funding stream to provide funding for 35 years of supportive services.

The Clearbrook housing project depends upon City Council passing the rezoning over what is sure to be loud opposition by area residents since Council has shown that if people scream loud enough council will cut and run.

On the other project the City backed away from the $11 million in construction funding plus 35 years worth of funding ($22,750,000) that the provincial government brought to the table.

If we say to the provincial government they should provide funding for affordable housing in Abbotsford, are they not entitled to say ‘we offered $11 million plus yearly funding for 35 years ($22,750,000) and Abbotsford City Cuncil passed on the funding’?

Further if Council fails to pass the rezoning for the Clearbrook Road project why would anyone, provincial government or charitable organization, want to invest (and potentially waste) resources, time and money in any project that depends on leadership from Abbotsford City Council?

Affordable housing has been built with the support of Mission’s Council, built with the support of Chilliwack’s Council and modular housing units from the Olympic athletes housing will be trucked through Abbotsford to add to the affordable housing stocks in Chilliwack.

Abbotsford City Council’s recent actions say that affordable housing has no future in our city until we get a council that is able to provide leadership, not money, on affordable housing.

********************

In reference to James Breckenridge of Abbotsford, and his June 12 letter in which he berates Abbotsford council for not doing enough to create low-cost housing, and laments the “lack of affordable housing, hiring social planners and forming of advisory committees” which he thinks can rectify the situation.

Many citizens feel that this is exactly the wrong way to go since it removes the responsibility of the other levels of government who are financially responsible for those tasks.

Please, please, look into the facts of what is a provincial or federal jurisdiction for funding and what is municipal in various areas of low-cost housing.

What we definitely do not need is more ways to spend money on duplicate efforts, and becoming enablers for those who shirk their responsibilities.

It is certainly easy for local governments to dip into the endless pot of funds provided by local taxes and do the job in order to gain brownie points, but it is not the right thing to do – either in these tight financial times or otherwise.

For those interested, phone the provincial government and ask for their B.C. Housing financial booklet for 2008 and it will show you exactly who is primarily responsible for the various areas of low-cost housing.

Then put all your energies to apply pressure through your government representatives to fulfil their responsibilities.

Lila Rauh,

Mission

Healing Garden.

The opening ceremonies for the Healing Garden behind the Salvation Army Centre of Hope were held Saturday June 13, 2009. It was an opportunity for local politicians to speak and for thanks to be expressed to those who had donated funds or materials to this project.

While the homeless truly appreciate these donations, we know that without Dave Darbey this area would still be patchy grass and weeds. It was Dave who, looking at patchy grass and weeds, saw what could be. It was Dave Darbey and Judy Williams who lavished the hours and sweat equity into the garden.

Others may have come alongside from time to time to contribute labour, but it was Dave and Judy who were the common denominators as the ponds and cascading water flows were dug with pick and shovel under the blazing sun last summer; as the piles of soil and rock disappeared wheelbarrow by wheelbarrow out of the store parking lot, around the building and into the garden area; as throughout the cold and wet of winter the garden continued to take shape; as places for greenhouse and seating were dug out of the hillsides during the rain and cold of the winter; as that greenhouse produced plants this spring; as over time pant materials were planted; as the Healing Garden was brought to life.

While the homeless may have questioned the sanity (or lack thereof) of Dave and Judy, there was never any question about the labour and love they poured into the Healing Garden to bring it to bloom.

It is because of this labour of love that the Healing Garden is a place of healing. Sitting there listening to the sound of water as it tumbles musically over the stones into the pond one can feel the stress wash away; seeking/finding peace, perhaps even serenity, as the love and good will lavished on creating the Healing Garden touch wounded/battered Spirits.

The official opening does not mean that, as in other public gardens, the Healing Garden is completed. Rather, it merely marks a point in the life of the Garden. Dave Darbey’s vision is not of a static, finished garden but of a garden that, like Life, flows and changes with the seasons and the passage of time.

It is this continual progression and growth, the additional investment of sweat equity and care, which will continue to make this space a Healing Garden.

It is in the example of Dave Darbey and Judy Williams that the possibility of making Abbotsford a Healing Community, a transcendent place to heal, recover and live lies revealed.

Why not in Abbotsford also?

“Why is there affordable housing being built in Chilliwack and Mission but not in Abbotsford?” was the question posed to me by someone who had recently moved from working on a mental health team in Chilliwack to a mental health team in Abbotsford.

The answer to the question is simple and straightforward – Abbotsford City Council.

While Abbotsford City Council has been paying lip service to the lamentable lack of affordable housing, hiring social planners and forming advisory committees – City Councils in Chilliwack and Mission have been supporting and standing behind supportive affordable housing projects in their cities.

As a result Abbotsford has ended up with growing homelessness and affordable housing problem building into a crisis; Chilliwack and Mission meanwhile have been plugging away at actions that result in affordable housing projects getting built in their cities.

‘No money!’ cries city council. ‘Here is $11 million for construction and $650,000 per year for staffing and support services, heck double that and make it two projects’ says the province.

No poverty excuse? No problem equivocate – look for a more suitable location for the Emerson project.

After the recent exercise of spinelessness by Abbotsford City Council on abandoning the densification called for by their own Official City Plan, what do you think the odds are they will find the backbone to vote for the rezoning needed for the Clearbrook Road to be built?

No doubt a suitable location for these provincially funded housing projects will be found. Unfortunately, based on recent history, the locations will most likely be in Chilliwack or Mission.

It is looking more and more as if the best chance to see affordable housing in Abbotsford will be after the 2010 Olympics when citizens can stand along Highway 1 and watch as some of the units that had housed athletes at the winter games past through Abbotsford on their way to Chilliwack. Where, once reassembled, they will add to Chilliwack’s growing stock of affordable housing.

Increasing numbers of people, fallout from the economic meltdown, are falling through our inadequate social safety net, landing on the streets and accelerating the increase in the numbers of people without housing and homeless.

Abbotsford city council has, with its careless disregard for the consequences of its failure to act and provide leadership, allowed this problem to continue to grow to the point of crises.

Council must stop making excuses, find some backbone, provide leadership and actually take an action (action as in something other than words or paper shuffling) that results in actual shovels in the ground on affordable housing projects.

Caveat Emptor

Machiavellian, manipulative flimflam and devious are a few of the words that came to mind as I watched the slick media campaign commercial seeking to convince Canadians to urge their MP’s to impose a special tax on Canadians in order to fund corporate welfare to save the media conglomerates from their own bad management and decision making.

A glib campaign camouflaged as “save local television” since Canadians are very unlikely to support another corporate bailout; especially one funded by the imposition of a new tax.

It appears that the media conglomerates learned a lesson from the cold reception their earlier attempt to sell a new tax on the internet to fund a bailout of their newspaper assets from bad management and decisions received.

This time around they are running a slick media campaign to hoodwink Canadians into demanding the federal government “save local television” through the imposition of a new tax to fund the proposed corporate welfare.

Stephen Harper has demonstrated that he is quite happy to provide $billions$ in corporate welfare or welfare for the rich while denying help to the working poor, those living in poverty and other Canadians at the lower end of the wealth spectrum. However, given the number of unemployed and working poor who find themselves facing the real possibility of joining the ranks of the homeless and the financial strains the recession is imposing on many other ordinary Canadians imposing a new tax on Canadians to bailout media conglomerates would be politically unwise.

Unless somehow Canadians could be persuaded to demand a new tax be imposed to fund corporate welfare to save Media from its own mismanagement.

So it is we find ourselves assailed by the slick “save local television” campaign.

This campaign is not about “save local television” but about saving the media conglomerates from the consequences of their decisions.

Unlike the conglomerates or that pseudo-capitalist Mr. Harper I see no reason to save businesses from the consequences of their own bad decision making and bad management practices.

Despite the fear mongering attempts to panic the public neither local television or local newspapers will disappear if the media conglomerates go under. What will disappear are the conglomerates, so it is hardly surprising that the conglomerates are desperate for corporate welfare to bail them out.

With the bankruptcy of the conglomerates their assets will be sold off in order for the lenders recover as much of the monies owed as possible.

The most likely outcome of this process is to return control of local television and newspapers to local ownership rather than continuing to have local television and newspapers answer to distant corporate interests and policies.

An outcome I consider to be highly desirable since it is my opinion that the interests of Canadians have been badly served by the creation of media conglomerates where local television and newspapers are driven to maximize profits to benefit corporate headquarters and answer to said corporate headquarters.

It is this “in the best interests of the conglomerate” that leads to questionable editorial and ethical standards; standards that would benefit substantially from local ownership.

It is not the deceptive nature of the “save local television” campaign and its hidden agenda to save the conglomerates through the imposition of a new tax burden on Canadians that causes me to state ethical standards would benefit from local ownership.

It is the misuse of local charities to endorse the campaign and the apparent disregard concerning the consequences misusing local charities to endorse this campaign could have on the charities that I find unacceptable.

It was quite disappointing to see charities such as the United Way, the Salvation Army, the Vancouver Food Bank and others endorsing a campaign to benefit media conglomerates via a new tax on Canadians.

Especially since the nature of their involvement could easily raise questions about the motivation of these charities for their endorsements.

Moreover I was rather shocked that these charities would jeopardize their charitable status through involvement in a political campaign; an action specifically prohibited under by the legislation governing the granting AND revoking of charitable status (the ability to issue tax receipts for donations received).

That it is a political campaign is evidenced by the call for people to put pressure on federal politicians to impose a this new tax and bailout the media conglomerates.

All of the charitable organizations involved need to rethink their endorsement and involvement while seriously considering adopting AA’s 6th tradition “An A.A. group ought never endorse, finance or lend the A.A. name to any related facility or outside enterprise, lest problems of money, property and prestige divert us from our primary purpose.”

In light of these facts Canadians should be contacting federal politicians to make it very clear they have no interest in being taxed to benefit media companies or save them from the consequences of their own actions and decisions.

Canadians should also make it clear to those running this campaign of misinformation that they find this behaviour unacceptable and have no interest in bailing out media companies.

Tell your federal politicians you say no to these new taxes and corporate welfare.