Category Archives: Thoughts

Homelessness

a speech by Bobbie Breckenridge

It’s the worst storm of the year, you’re scrambling to find shelter away from the cold. As you run down the street feeling the frost bite spread through out your body, you look up and see the house you used to own. You pause for just a second to see the happy family sitting around the fireplace warm and toasty so innocent and wonder What would their parents do if their little girl was homeless?? (pause) Good afternoon/morning Mr.T and fellow classmates today I will be talking about the very sad but realistic growing problem in today’s society “Homelessness”. Many people suffer from homelessness each day. You may see them on the streets of Toronto begging for money. What you might not know is that 5052 people are homeless in Toronto alone. Across Canada is an estimated 150,000 people who are homeless. Now think all those people have families and friends who love them. You might be wondering why these people don’t turn to their family and friends for help. Well there are many reasons that people don’t go to there relatives and stay homeless for long periods of time. One reason is that a majority of homeless people are mentally ill. Another reason is that a lot of the homeless are alcohol and substance abusers. The other reasons are: Unemployment, poverty and low paying jobs. The vast majority of the homeless are not living on the street. Many are sleeping in church basements, abandoned buildings and vehicles and in other places away from the public.
Here’s an eye opener 1 in 7 people who are in shelters are children just like us. They unlike us suffer from lack of education and physical abuse. Most of them will grow up to be nothing but there are an odd few that become very rich and have great lives. The pursuit of happiness is a great example of this. This amazing life changing film has a significant meaning and shows that if you work hard enough it will pay off. If you’re saying to yourself right now yeah this all may be true but why don’t they go get a job? Well if you think about it, when you go for a job interview the necessary things needed are: good hygiene (you don’t want to smell bad), proper clothes, a resume (which needs a computer), a phone (so they can call you back) and an address. Even if you do get the job you need five days worth of clean clothes, you need to be rested and be fed in order to concentrate on your work. Plus it will take a couple of months before you have enough money to rent affordable housing. By the end of all that you would probably be fired. Here are some facts on homelessness: Children under 18 make up 27% of the homeless, people from the age of 3 to 50 make up 51% of the homelessness, here’s a scary one 50% of the homeless are women and children running from domestic abuse. So next time you see someone on the street think about everything I’ve said. Think everyone has a different story another tale and all you have to do is take the time and try to think how can I help the on growing problem??? What can I do???

Politics at is morally bankrupt worst

On Tuesday January 9, 2007 I sent a letter to CanWest and various newspapers expressing my thoughts on the complete lack of judgement evidenced by Global’s Vancouver television station and their telethon for Stanley Park. With all the important issues that need funding and public awareness it was to aggravating to remain silent on the insult offered to all those in true need of assistance.

Imagine then how infuriating it was on Thursday to watch the politically desperate behaviour of the NDP, a party that claims to champion those society views as disposable. There, in a disgusting display of opportunism, were various members of the NDP caucus and party as they sought to score meaningless political points against Gordon Campbell for the province not donating millions more to “restoring” Stanley Park. As if nature, another area it would appear the NDP pay only lip service to, were not capable of healing Stanley Park without any “help”.

To add further injury to the numerous insults good judgment, ethical behaviour and a sense of priorities have taken over Stanley Park this week, Gordon Campbell showed a total lack of backbone and jumped on this decadent and senseless Stanley Park bandwagon. Apparently Mr. Campbell’s “NO” is only firm when denying funding to the poor, homeless and those in real need. Appeasement is seemingly the policy of Mr. Campbell and his Liberal’s when the decision has such a potential to negatively affect Liberal party coffers or political fortunes.

Watching this vile display of moral bankruptcy and politics leaves one yearning, make that praying, for the addition to the BC political landscape of a new party with ideas, ideals, honour, the ability to say “NO” and a sense of priorities based on principal and reality. Otherwise I and many others are left disenfranchised, lacking as we do any party or candidates worthy of our support or deserving of being entrusted with the governance of British Columbia.

Rich – poor gap becomes a chasm

Toronto Star, January 10, 2007 Carol Goar
Churning out cogent new studies on poverty wouldn’t work, the research team decided. Canadians already knew how bad the problem was.


Making the case for fair wages, affordable housing, decent welfare rates and universal child care wouldn’t turn the tide, they agreed. Dozens of advocacy groups were doing that with negligible success.

What was needed was a catalyst to turn awareness into action.

It was the summer of 2006. The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives had just received a generous donation to wake people up to the alarming rise of inequality in Canada.
The three lead researchers – Armine Yalnizyan, Hugh Mackenzie and Trish Hennessy – were brainstorming about how to get the message out, how to make it relevant to Canadians and how to get governments to move.

“We had to take it beyond poverty,” Yalnizyan recalled. “We had to give everybody a stake in the issue.

“We had to show what’s happening to us as a society. We had to get people talking about how disconnected the winners have become from the rest of us. This is the central economic and social issue of our day.”

On Nov. 20, the centre launched its “Growing Gap” project. Its aim is to convert people’s unease about the concentration of wealth into an active conviction that something is wrong when the economy is doing better than most of the population; when families are working longer and harder to stay in the same place; and when governments sanction this arrangement.

To kick off the initiative, the think-tank sent out pollsters to find out how Canadians are doing after a decade of strong economic growth. After interviewing 2,021 randomly selected adults, the pollsters came back with sobering – but not surprising – news:

– Fifty-one per cent said their standard of living had either dropped or stayed the same.
– Forty-nine per cent said they were one or two missed paycheques away from being poor.
– Sixty-five per cent said the benefits of economic growth had gone to the richest Canadians.
– Seventy-six per cent said the gap between rich and poor had widened.

“What’s clear in this poll is that Canadians are worried about their personal future and equally worried about the direction their country might be going,” the think-tank said.
Next, it backed up these perceptions with facts. It released a series of statistical sketches of inequality.

The research team was hampered by a scarcity of up-to-date figures (the census, the best source of information on wealth and income, is now 6 years old), but sifted through earnings reports, employment numbers, housing data, consumer debt, economic trends and the 2001 census.

What emerged was a picture of widening disparity. The top 20 per cent of families held 75 per cent of the nation’s wealth and were rapidly accumulating more. The bottom 20 per cent had no net wealth (their debts exceeded their assets) and were sinking deeper into poverty. The middle 60 per cent were struggling to hold their ground.

“Economic insecurity is now a fact of life for most workers, regardless of where they fit into the income spectrum,” the think-tank pointed out.

Shortly before Christmas, the research team issued a year-end review suggesting – hopefully rather than confidently – that the growing gap would be the “sleeper issue” of 2007.

“This is a problem looking for political leadership. Will 2007 be the year our political leaders take it on?”

To usher in the New Year, Mackenzie did a bit of number crunching and came up with an attention-grabbing comparison.

He showed that by 9:46 a.m. on Jan. 2, the country’s 100 highest paid chief corporate executives would make $38,010 – the same amount the average Canadian worker could expect to earn in the entire year.

In the coming months, the think-tank will explore what happens to a society when its privileged minority gets so far ahead of the rest of the population that there is no shared experience to draw on, no common set of goals and no basis for democratic dialogue.

The debate has already begun in Toronto, partly because of an alarming spike in gun violence in the summer of 2005 and partly because of the leadership of Frances Lankin, president of the United Way. She has been warning for three years that Toronto is developing enclaves of extreme poverty, social tension and urban decay.

The timing of the Growing Gap project could be auspicious. Neo-conservatism seems to be on the wane. Canadians are rethinking the trade-off between big tax cuts and threadbare social safety nets.

On the other hand, fate could play a cruel trick. Just as the initiative takes hold, it could be swamped by the environmental wave coming down the pike.
Yalnizyan and her colleagues are ready for either scenario.

They’ll fight as long and hard as it takes to convince Canadians that a strong society is one in which everybody moves ahead together.

(More information is available at www.growinggap.ca).

When pondering the Imponderable ….

…. depression can take advantage of your inattention.

I made the mistake of not allowing sufficient time to have passed in this New Year before I let my mind wander to consideration of how to change Abbotsford from a community to a community. I should have known better than to let my mind ponder such a seemingly impossible task until the season of despair (aka Christmas season) and its mental booby-traps was long past. I most certainly should have been vigilant enough not to miss taking my medication when contemplating such a potentially depressing undertaking. spirit downward spins/ screaming fading lost quiet/ despair triumphant.

The truly disheartening part of all this is that the widespread reaction on the part of the inhabitants of Abbotsford to reading “change … a community to a community” will be HUH? That’s stupid: a community is a community, is a community.

Untrue. A community is merely a happenstance involving a group of people, usually being in the same spot or area to which we apply a label such as, in the case of Abbotsford, a city. On the hand other a community is much more spiritual in nature involving as it does concepts such as fellowship, connection, empathy, helping, even kinship.

In Abbotsford this is further complicated by the practice inhabitants have of getting together to form cliques. This results in a turning away, a turning ones back on, those who do not belong to the closed circle. Next-door neighbours, if they are not a member, seemingly have no real relevance to clique members.

This past year has resulted in my having connections across several of these groups. With their inward focus these groups, even in areas of mutual concern, do not play well together. Collaboration is necessary to address the needs of our neighbours since the scale of the need has become so large as to require all of us to resolve. The thought of liaising in such a manner as to get them to work together as part of a team is intimidating.

It is even more nerve-racking to consider weaving a web to connect all the city’s differing groups together so that, by tweaking the web, you can center their attention on a vision compelling enough it is capable of drawing all the varied groups within Abbotsford together in such a way as to give rise to a community is.

Contemplating conceiving such a vision is, to say the least, daunting. So daunting that it hovers on being overwhelming. Which is why I definitely should have waited until the bleakness that this season holds for me was solidly behind me. Because part of being able conceive of that inspiring vision is also being able to see the human toll that will be paid in 2007, and the years beyond, if Abbotsford does not achieve the change from merely a community of geographic coincidence to a community with spirit, heart, a soul.

Just who is it that is responsible for turning off the Christmas Spirit, for throwing the Switch from ON to OFF?

On Christmas Day less than half of the clients at the Abbotsford Emergency Shelter wanted even a small plate of food and the Shelter itself was just over half full. The free breakfast and turkey dinners around town this Christmas Day had them all as stuffed as the turkeys they had consumed. During the previous two – three weeks there was an abundance of meals, food and care packages for the poor, hungry and homeless.

On December 26th the switch was thrown, the Spirit turned off for another year and greed was out in full force prowling the Boxing Day Sales. And the Shelter was again full of the homeless who were once more cold, hungry and unwanted.

This is written on New Years Day in a Shelter overfull with clients who have devoured every crumb to be found. What a difference a week makes. They face the bleak cold hungry days of January and a year lacking the promise of anything better. With the upcoming year holding out to me the promise of challenges to be met and things that need accomplishing I cannot help but ponder the Christmas Spirit Switch.

This Switch is why the Abbotsford Food Bank and other such charities work so hard and long at raising funds through donations during the Christmas Spirit Season. They HAVE to raise the majority of their yearly operating budgets during this short yearly outpouring of the Christmas Spirit. Because once the Switch is OFF, getting donations is an uphill battle against the inertia of indifference.

Of course the answer to the question about the Switch is that we are each responsible for our own Christmas Switch and turning OFF our Spirit. I have resolved for the New Year to try to keep my Spirit Switch in the caring/helping/giving position, even when some members of the homeless community have me contemplating homicide.

We each get to choose whether the Spirit of this season if OFF until next year’s Christmas season or stays ON in the caring/helping/giving position throughout the entire year. Take a moment to ponder your Switch and whether your Spirit will be ON or OFF during this New Year. It is Your Choice.