Category Archives: The Issues

Ignored to Death

During a conversation several members of the homeless community posed a question of ethics, an ethical challenge about the behaviours and actions of the people, institutions and organizations in dealing with an individual – and the fact that these types of behaviours and actions were not unique to this individual.

The ethical challenge applies not just to those directly involved but included the governments whose actions have created the conditions in which these behaviours can or will occur. It also included all of us who have created the ethos [the fundamental character or spirit of a culture] of British Columbia and Canada.

The ethos of a community, a province and a country are not created by words or piously beating our breasts and declaring to the world how wonderfully pure we are and impure others are. No, the ethos of our society results from our actions AND our inactions. The ethos of Canada is the sum total of the behaviours of ALL of us, not some mysterious them.

Mr Dix, before you begin blaming the Liberals and declaring how innocent you and the NDP are – you are at least as culpable, as blameworthy, as the Liberals. It was you Mr Dix who ran around the province taking the politically popular position of extinguishing the HST and ignoring the devastating negative consequences extinguishing the HST who have on the most vulnerable, those most in need of help in BC. An ethical opposition would be focused on speaking for the most vulnerable for they have no voice that will be heard to speak for themselves. An opposition focussed on scoring political points so it can gain power and form the next government is an ethically challenged Political Party.

I originally met George shortly after becoming homeless. At least at one point I was the homeless one and George the housed person. I cannot say who the real George was because I did not met George until after he suffered a traumatic brain injury. Yes at the time I met him George could be a little crusty. And yes, George did use illegal substances.

Flash forward to the first half of 2011 where George and I had a conversation, with George speaking about his feeling that after more than a decade he was starting to get to where he was before his brain injury.

The next time I ran into George, he was fresh from the hospital where he had just lost some toes to circulation problems. Regular meals at the Salvation Army, nagging by the Salvation Army’s parish nurse and others who knew George, led to him turning up at the Salvation Army almost dancing. He was so happy he was nearly dancing because he had just come from a check-up where he was told that his physical health had improved so much they would not have to remove more toes as expected.

When I saw George again recently it was quite a shock because he looked terrible – death warmed over terrible – looking like a walking corpse. He was fresh out of the hospital where he had an operation on his stomach. The operation has left George feeling unwell, in a lot of pain and thinking (as do most who see him) that he will, sooner rather than later, be dead.

Hardly surprising then that he is not a fount of sweetness and light. George shares his discomfort, pain and fear through angry, loud, abusive verbal outbursts that include a lot of swearing and are unpleasant and offensive to be on the receiving end of. Which makes George a royal pain in the ass to deal with.

Been there, experienced that, wanted to throttle George.

And while I can understand and sympathize with “I don’t have to put up with being sworn at like that”……..being an obnoxious, loud, verbally abusive, swearing pain in the ass does not deserve the death penalty.

Dumping George onto the streets is imposing the death penalty because in his current state of health he will not survive being homeless on the streets.

Nobody wants to deal with George so they try to dump him on someone else. A situation the Abbotsford Police found themselves caught in when the hospital, which George had been more or less dumped on, phoned the police to remove him for his swearing and angry verbal attacks. Normally, if there is no place to take someone in Abbotsford that someone ends up on the street.

The Abbotsford police ended up taking George to Chilliwack to find a place for him to stay for the night and avoid having George die as a result of being dumped onto the streets by police.

Since them George has been in the hospitals in Chilliwack, in Hope and back in Abbotsford because no one wants to deal with George and get rid of him as soon as they can dump him on someone else.

The homeless community, noting George’s absence and concerned about whether George was alive, enquired about what was going on and what George’s current fate was. They raised the question of ethics when another member of the homeless community supplied information that George had gone from the Chilliwack hospital to the Hope hospital to the Abbotsford hospital where George currently was.

Last year Dallas, who had struggled with drugs and recovery, found himself in the shelter and depressed as he again struggled with addiction. Not the ‘I am so depressed’ that most people have experienced and think of when they hear someone is depressed, but the life sucking black hole that is true DRESSION. Dallas sought help as he spiralled down into DRESSION, at Emergency at the Abbotsford hospital.

Only to be turned away as he hadn’t tried and was not threatening to kill himself or someone else. So he left the hospital and tried to kill himself. Unfortunately he was successful.

Ted’s feet had been frostbitten and not treated. When using Ted is loud, verbally nasty, tries to physically intimidate people and is a bully. When circumstances resulted in me applying antibiotic and bandages to Ted’s foot one evening, the, the black damage of frostbite on his toes together with the bare, open flesh where the frostbite damage had resulted in the loss of skin and flesh was such a concern I managed to get his foot looked at by a nurse the following day.

During the course of the examination Ted stated that his foot was not as painful as it had been. I enquired if that might be because of the high level of drugs he had ingested and he conceded it might be. He knew he could lose toes, foot or leg to the frostbite damage, vowing he would rather die.

Because Ted is a royal pain in the ass and very unpleasant to deal with, Ted is another who the system and society strives not to deal with. Ted did find a rather unique way to get help, robbing a bank in Abbotsford, walking down to the bus stop and having a seat until police arrived to arrest him.

The countdown has already begun for the next person slated to be ignored to death in Abbotsford.

 

A society is ultimately judged by how it treats its weakest and most vulnerable members”

Hubert Humphrey

“The moral test of a government is how it treats those who are at the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the aged; and those who are in the shadow of life, the sick and the needy, and the handicapped.”

Hubert Humphrey

“Once upon a time……

…… in a magic kingdom called British Columbia, the government of the land could spend as much as it wanted without having to give any thought to where the money to pay for everything was going to come from because the government could ‘find’ money whenever it wanted to.

All the citizens of this land were overjoyed that they did not have to pay (as do the unfortunate citizens of lands that exist in the real world) for the ever increasing services and perks the citizens, with their insatiable appetite for more health care, more hospitals, more salary, more perks…..more……more……more…..,  demanded their government provide to them.

Anytime the government of the Kingdom wanted to spend money on something, the MLA’s merely needed to walk through the garden of the castle called Legislature and pick up the money that had fallen off the money trees growing in the garden or visit the basement of the Legislature and exchange the gold that the little man Rumpelstiltskin had spun from straw or pluck the gold eggs from the nest of the goose who lays gold eggs.

One group of citizens, Teachers, were so enamoured of the government’s ability to ‘find’ money without limit, they felt it  reasonable to demand a 22% wage increase – plus a host of expensive perks and changes to schools. To support their fatuous salary demands, the Teachers spread the tale of the government’s magical ability to ‘find’ $$$$ whenever the government wished, throughout the airwaves of the land.”

Unfortunately for the citizens of BC they reside in the real world – despite politicians of all stripes and parties (Liberal, NDP, Conservative) telling voters the fairy tales voters, who insist on living in the land of ‘Wilful Denial of Reality’, demand to be told in order to give the politicians what they want – political power.

In the real world neither fairy tales nor wilful denial prevents the outstanding bills and debts from – at some point in time – coming due……as the outstanding bills and debts are now doing in Greece.

The problem is not with the teachers telling a fairy tale, or with the perversion of fairy tales from teaching a lesson about life to fairy tales as a way to enable wilful denial of reality.

The problem is that the advertisements and statements from teachers and their representatives evidence the teachers belief in the fairy tale they are telling.

Providing a little understanding as to why, despite the hundreds of millions of $$$$$ taxpayers pour into education, students are getting a 4th rate education. An education that leaves students in BC functionally (or actually) illiterate in English and Mathematics, lacking even the most basic skills in logic and problem solving or the ability to analyse what has occurred or attain an understanding of the consequences and/or implications flowing from events.

With the teachers demonstrating their inability to analyse, use logic, problem solve, research and understand what is, as opposed to seeing the fairy tale land they want to see, it should surprise nobody that the product (graduates) of the BC school system lacks these skills. Or that students of the BC school system cannot use the English language or Mathematics in a functional or useful manner.

As ‘proof’ of the existence of their fairy tale land of unlimited plenty the teachers point to the $600 million the government spent on the new roof on BC Place.

A comparison of the proverbial apples to oranges as the BC place roof is a capital project representing a one time (admittedly large, but that is the nature of capital projects) expenditure and teachers salaries, which are operating expenses that need to be paid every year, not one single time.

The teachers also either ignore or fail to understand that operating expenses such as wages, suffer a compounding effect as the starting point of future contracts and increases is the current contract negotiated.

The biggest problem is that the teachers ignore where the provincial government had originally found the $$$ (and what happened to those $$$) – accepting Ottawa’s offer of $1.6 billion to harmonize the PST with Ottawa’s GST.

And we all know, or at least should know, how that worked out.

The citizens of BC voted to continue their state of wilful denial and extinguish the HST – a demonstration of a lack of the skills required to evaluate and understand the consequences extinguishing the HST would have on provincial finances and the ability of the BC government to deliver services to citizens.

I am assuming the decision was due to a lack of skills to understand the consequences of extinguishing the HST and not to the desire to force the government of BC to reduce the services delivered to BC citizens or a lack of mental capacity or insanity.

See “Think. Think. Think.”  for an analysis of the consequences flowing from extinguishing the HST.

There are delicious ironies in the karmic balance of the government literally having no money to raise teacher salaries.

Irony that the product (graduates) of the BC school system, of the teachers teaching, lack the ability to analyse, use logic, problem solve, research and understand the extensive negative financial consequences of extinguishing HST. One of which is a reduction of the funds the province has to provide services to the people of BC. Which results in not only no money for increases in education costs such as teachers salaries and smaller classes, but puts the government under pressure to find ways to reduce or ‘reallocate’ spending on  education.

Irony that the teachers and their union are supporters of the NDP party, which spent months travelling the province publicly supporting and working to extinguishing the HST. The ‘success’ of which meant there are no funds available to increase spending on education. Actually, this irony applies across the entire government employees union.

Irony in the strong probability that numerous teachers voted to extinguish the HST, voted to place the government in a financial position where there is no money to be able to afford increasing teacher’s salaries or spending more on education.

Irony that voters acted in such an egregious and childish manner as to ‘damn reality or the consequences, threw a temper tantrum and extinguish the HST in anger’ – rather than acting like adults; taking the consequences of throwing a temper tantrum versus a reasoned response into consideration.

Irony in that childishness being reflected in the teachers rushing to get on strike before the government introduces and passes legislation imposing a settlement. Three days of being on strike that will accomplish nothing since the final outcome of the matter will be the same strike or no strike. The only ‘accomplishments’ of the teachers strike being the inconveniencing of parents and more negative consequences for students – in particular those who graduate this year. Although, the strike will make available to government the savings achieved from not having to pay 3 days of teachers wages.

Irony in the teachers, whose job is (theoretically at least) to impart knowledge, clinging in wilful denial to the fairy tale world in which the government has (in effect) access to money trees or Rumpelstiltskin or a goose laying gold eggs. Because it is only in that fairy tale world can teachers demands be met. In the real world there is no money and the teachers are SOL.

From the Tao of James:

Reality does not care what you want to be fact, reality does not care what you believe to be fact, Reality simply is what IS

The bottom line, the real world Reality, is it that until teachers are turning out well educated, well rounded, well prepared to deal with the real world product (students) – teachers salaries should be going DOWN, not up.

Think. Think. Think.

There are good reasons that Think Think Think is an Alanon slogan. Primarily, that not thinking things through, failing to carefully use thought to achieve an understanding of what the REALITY of the issue being decided IS and what the consequences of the choices that flow from that reality are, is how you find yourself sinking in the financial quagmire that BC, through its choices and actions, finds itself in.

Continuing to fail or to refuse to think or to consider reality and burying our heads in the sand of wilful denial is how you end up a financial disaster like Greece.

Or, as voters in BC did in June 2011, voting to reduce the services the government of BC (health care, education, etc) provides to citizens of BC by $300 million a year for the next 5 years.

Reducing services by $300 million a year may not be what voters intended to do when they voted to extinguish the HST. But by failing to invest the time and effort required to achieve an understanding of the HST and the consequences of extinguishing the HST, then voting to extinguish the HST, voters voted to reduce services provided by the BC government to citizens by $300 million a year for the next five years.

In order to understand how, in voting to extinguish the HST, voters were voting to reduce government services by $300 million a year for 5 years let us review the history of the HST in Ottawa and Victoria.

In late 2009 and early 2010 the BC Liberal government found itself in need of $458 million ($600 million final bill) to replace the roof on BC Place and a $billion$ or $two$ to replenish government coffers depleted by spending on the Olympics.

In Ottawa the federal government had just wrapped up its negotiations with Ontario as to the size of the bribe, I mean compensation, Ontario would receive from Ottawa to cover the costs of harmonizing Ontario’s sales tax with Ottawa’s GST.

With Ontario on board to bring in the HST, Ottawa turned its attention to getting Quebec and BC to harmonize their sales taxes with the GST; offering Quebec and BC $1.6 billion bribes, ahem – compensation, to bring in the HST.

Cash strapped as a result of Olympics costs and facing the need to pay for the new BC Place roof, BC’s Liberal government agreed to accept the – compensation – offered by Ottawa and bring in the HST.

When the BC Liberal government announced they would be bringing in the HST the citizens of BC jumped to the conclusion that the Liberals had lied during the provincial election, during which the Liberals had said they would not be bringing in the HST. With citizens citing the fact that politicians “ALWAYS” lie as ‘proof’ that the Liberals knew at the time of the election they would be bringing in the HST.

As to the matter of politicians lying. Voters point their fingers and accuse politicians of ‘always’ lying as if voters have nothing to do with politicians behaviour. For decades voters have been wilfully denying the Reality of what IS the state of affairs in BC (and Canada), wilfully denying the implications of the Reality of the state of affairs and the consequences that would (have to and do) flow from ignoring the Reality of what the state of affairs IS –  in favour of what voters WANT to be the Reality of the state of affairs.

In choosing to dwell in wilful denial, voters rewarded those politicians who told them what they WANTED to hear and punished any politician who dared to speak of what voters NEEDED to hear and consider. Only wilful denial would cause someone to be surprised that after decades of this behaviour, politicians now tell voters what voters want to hear – saying whatever is required to avoid telling voters anything that voters do not want to hear.

‘Politicians lie’ because voters have voted anyone who does not lie – particularly those who insist on addressing the Reality of the issues facing our cities, provinces, territories and country – out of office and out of public life. Thus voters themselves have voted to have politicians lie to them. A situation allowing voters to avoid facing financial Reality.

In the scheme of things it doesn’t really matter what Campbell and the Liberals knew and when they knew it, they had no choice but to say yes. Given the financial state of affairs in BC it would have been financially irresponsible not to take the $1.6 billion from Ottawa – and the additional revenue the HST would generate.

Feeling they had been lied to (ignoring their own culpability for politicians use of doublespeak to avoid telling voters what they don’t want to hear and to instead tell voters what they want to hear) voters condemned the government for implementing the HST.

Presented with the opportunity to exact a pound of flesh from Campbell and the Liberals – whose existence, by presenting an alternative to the NDP, led to the demise of the Social Credit and Bill Vander Zalm’s notoriety as the leader who killed the BC Social Credit Party – Bill Vander Zalm jumped on the anti-HST bandwagon and helped propel the issue to referendum.

While the political fallout suffered by the Liberals and Gordon Campbell’s resignation no doubt  were very satisfying to Vander Zalm, his actions in helping to extinguishing the HST have resulted in painful financial consequences and the financially driven need to reduce government services to citizens.

In an ironic twist of heroic size, Vander Zalm’s action put Gordon Campbell in London England as Canadian High Commissioner and allowed him to exit BC politics as the leader who lead the Liberals into power and left the Liberals in power with a majority. It also allowed Campbell to exit before financial realities began to place tighter and tighter constraints on what a BC government can do, what services it will have the revenues to supply and the need to cut services.

Which would have me, if I was in Mr Campbell’s shoes, enjoy a very merry last laugh.

Either Vander Zalm, sensing blood in the water, seized the opportunity to inflict a wound on Campbell and the Liberals OR Mr Vander Zalm is notably intelligence challenged. The implication, should Mr Vander Zalm possess a minimal level of intelligence, is that Mr Vander Zalm wanted his pound of flesh so badly he did not care how much financial damage extinguishing the HST of the fiancés of BC.   

Presented with the opportunity to score political points the NDP leaped on the bandwagon of a referendum and extinguishing the HST. Campaigning to reduce government revenues, even as the NDP called for the government of BC to spend hundreds of millions of dollars more on healthcare, education and other voter wants (as opposed to needs).

We are faced with another either. Either the NDP want power, to form the government of BC, so badly that they will do and say anything – no matter how much financial damage their actions inflict on the finances of BC OR the NDP are so financially incompetent that they see no conflict in advocating ripping $1.6 billion out of the finances of BC (giving it back to Ottawa), reducing sales tax revenue by extinguishing the HST – and being able to spend hundreds of millions of dollars more on healthcare, education etc.

When voters exercised their right to extinguish the HST in a fit of temper, they surrendered their right to demand increased services from the government and surrendered any right to expect the same level of services from the government. Because in choosing to extinguish the HST, voters chose to reduce the dollars the government has available to purchase services (healthcare, hospital beds, classrooms).

Of course, living in wilful denial the voters of BC simply refused to acknowledge they had voted to reduce the funding available to the government to purchase services. The day after voting to rip $1.6 billion out of BC’s finances and to reduce government sales tax revenue voters were once again demanding more, more, more, more.

Which is how we arrived at the financial state BC is in today.

In light of the reality that Ottawa transfers more than $1.6 billion to BC every year, not repaying the money to Ottawa was not an option. Thus the BC government found itself forced to negotiate the repayment of the $1.6 billion over the next 5 years. Borrowing the $1.6 billion, and repaying Ottawa immediately was also not an option as it would have caused BC’s credit rating to be downgraded – pushing interest rates and the cost of servicing the provinces debt up.

Given the effect of debt levels on the provinces ability and cost to borrow; the sputtering state of the economy; the uncertainty of the economies around the world; voters refusal to pay to cover the cost of the services they demand (and receive) from the government: the funds available to the government of BC to purchase and pay for services for the citizens of BC will remain approximately what was available in the 2011 – 2012 financial year.

What does that portend for BC and its citizens over the next five years?

The monies available to purchase services for citizens will, for the next 5 years, be reduced by $300 million. In other words, in order to repay Ottawa the government of BC will have to reduce the services it provides to citizens by $300 million a year or manage to raise $300 million extra to offset the repayment to Ottawa. This is one of the consequences of voting to extinguish the HST.

Healthcare costs consume the biggest piece of the provincial budget. Unless – miraculously – the cost to purchase the same services next year as purchased this year remains the same (for the first time ever), the province will need to increase spending on healthcare  – just to hold services provided at the same level of services as this year.

People demand new operations, procedures, drugs, equipment, hospitals, hospital rooms, etc and ask why they are not available. Simple – no budget for these services means there is no money to pay for these services, ergo no services.

Healthcare was estimated at $15.7 billion for the 2011 – 2012 fiscal year. Over the past decade healthcare has increased 6.4% a year on average. Which leaves the government needing an additional $1 billion to pay for health care in the 2012 – 2013 fiscal year.

With the money cut from the budget by extinguishing the HST and no significant increases in revenue where will the money come from to pay for healthcare? or education? the courts?

Reality: if there ain’t no (enough) money, their ain’t no (the desired level of) services.

The report prepared on what Ontario will need to do to avoid becoming the first Canadian political jurisdiction to become a ‘Greece’ included pegging annual healthcare funding increases at 2.5% even though cost increases are running at 5%. In other words Ontario is faced with being forced to cut healthcare services provided to citizens because it has failed to keep its financial house in order.

Healthcare, Education, Justice system are all poised to devour substantially more dollars. But the dollars to pay substantially more for Healthcare, Education, Justice System do not exist.

Mr Dix can demand the government spend hundreds of millions, a billion of two, more dollars on healthcare, education and the courts. It will no doubt win the NDP points towards winning the next election. But no matter how hard Mr. Dix huffs and puffs……his demands are meaningless, pointless grandstanding when the money cupboard is bare.

With the government limited in the amount that it can borrow (without the cost of borrowing reaching levels where the more you borrow the less dollars you have to spend) and without significant increases in revenue, Financial Reality is threatening to force citizens out of their state of wilful denial and face to face with financial reality.

BC can begin to set priorities, begin to chose what we spend our limited funds on (healthcare versus pointlessly locking more and more people up), begin to acknowledge reality and make rational decisions based on what IS rather than what we BELIEVE or WANT to be.

Or we can bury our heads more deeply in the sands of wilful denial until suddenly we find ourselves on the international news as the latest political jurisdiction to have hit the Greece’d plunge into financial hardship and a bleak future for citizens.

Budget Realities Establish Shelter Realities.

I was at a meeting focusing on shelter needs in Abbotsford, what the shelter needs of Abbotsford are, whether the shelter needs are being met (are their gaps in shelter services) and what is the solution to meeting those needs.

Some members of the homeless, those with mental health issues, those with addiction issues community became aware of this meeting and felt their interests needed to represented and protected from any negative consequences resulting from this meeting.

I attend the meetings to represent one subset of the homeless/addiction/mental illness/poverty community who have concerns about their needs, wants and priorities being misrepresented by another subset of the homeless/addiction/mental illness/poverty community presenting their concerns as those of the entire community – when in fact the concerns being discussed at the meeting represent only the point of view of the one group whose voice is loud because they have organized and branded (labeled) themselves.

Which is why one of the tenets in the Tao of James is that when you are dealing with issues or problems involving people the idea that there is A SOULUTION is a fallacy.

The major component in the puzzle of providing shelter for those without a place to hang their hat or in addressing the issues of homelessness/addiction/mental illness/poverty is people

This does not mean you cannot address the issue(s) or work on ways to resolve these issues. What it means is you need to be cognizant of not squandering resources that could be used to address some important aspect of the issue trying to find or achieve a non-existent solution.

People feel that the provincial government is nickel and diming them to death with small increases in fees, taxes (i.e. the carbon tax) etc.

The governments is – because the cost of providing some of the most popular services government provides are increasing by double digit percentages every year; and while citizens demand government provide those services, citizens also demand the government continue to provide those services without tax increases.

An irrational and impossible demand which has created a host of negative consequences, but a demand that underscores the point that people as a factor in an issue or problem (such as the provincial budget)  introduces complexity, dilemma and unreality to the point that the idea that there is A SOULUTION is a fallacy.

Because of the (to me irrational) actions of BC voters in voting to return the $1.6 billion to Ottawa, for the next 5 years $300 million off the top of the budget will be going to Ottawa – leaving $300 million less to provide government services to the citizens of BC; $300 million that will have to be cut from the budget. Coupled with the fact that healthcare costs are increasing at double digit rates, you are looking at struggling to hold onto your piece of a shrinking pie, fighting for funding that is becoming scarce, much less increasing your share of that shrinking pie.

Shelters are not cheap to run. You have the rental cost of a space to use as a shelter, salaries for staff, food and food preparation costs, laundry facilities and supplies, repairs and maintenance, utilities, heat, cooling, water, costs of office services needed to keep the shelter running, insurance, etc.

The cost to house a given number of persons increases as the size of the shelters decrease and the number of shelters used to house that given number of people increase. Which is why the shelters opened in Vancouver over the past 5 years, particularly the cold wet weather shelters, are designed to house as large a number of clients as possible in any one shelter.

The additional cost for the shelter at the Salvation Army’s Centre of Hope to house 20 clients rather than 12 is not that significant because all the major costs remain the same and it is only additional costs such as food that are required to increase in order to raise the number of clients from 12 to 20.

However if one decided to split the 20 beds leaving 12 at the current shelter for people who are sober and open a separate shelter of 8 beds at a new shelter with minimal – if any rules – for those in their addiction……

The cost savings realized at the existing shelter by reducing the number of clients and available to fund any new shelter you open…….would probably not cover the cost of food at the new shelter (the cost of food to feed 20 at one location being less than the cost of food to feed 12 at one location and 8 at another).

The rental cost of a space to use as a shelter, salaries for staff, food preparation costs, laundry facilities and supplies, repairs and maintenance, utilities, heat, cooling, water, costs of office services needed to keep the shelter running, insurance etc would remain the same at the Centre of Hope shelter. Which means you would need to find funding to cover the rental cost of a space to use as a shelter, insurance, salaries for staff, food preparation costs, laundry facilities and supplies, repairs and maintenance, utilities, heat, cooling, water, costs of office services needed to keep the shelter running, insurance etc at any new location(s).

The financial reality is that by splitting the current twenty beds between two shelters – 12 beds and 8 beds – you double the cost of providing 20 shelter beds in Abbotsford.

The call for another, separate, shelter for those with substance use issues appears to revolve around the assertion that it isn’t ‘fair’ that those in their addiction have to obey minimal rules of civil behaviour, cannot use as they like, come and go as they like and behave as badly as they want. That it isn’t ‘fair’ that the sober clients have to endure the bad behaviour of those in their addiction. Or at least those in their addiction who take no responsibility for their actions.

But what about the best interests of those who are in their addiction but accept that an addiction or a mental illness does not absolve you of responsibility for your behaviour and the exercise in self control.

This group feel it would be unfair to force them into a shelter where the ‘inmates are running the asylum’. They feel that stricter standards of behaviour – for everyone – need to be set and enforced; that their rights are currently violated by the tolerance shown those who act out.

Does being ‘fair’ require a separate shelter to serve every groups needs?

Where is all this money going to come from, given the budget reality the BC government is facing?

It is imperative to keep the reality that the government of BC has less money available in the forefront of one’s mind and discussions to ensure that discussions address the question of priorities. If you face increasingly limited opportunities for funding to increase resources or services it is vital you set priorities – or you will find yourself with a new service or resource that is nice and without a service or resource that is vital.

Given that people are a major part of the puzzle seeking ‘perfect’ shelter resources is as fruitless as chasing a mirage. So the question becomes ‘Do you want to spend your limited resources or increases in resources chasing a mirage or should those scarce resources be spent on other needs with higher priorities?’

The financial reality is that any monies the provincial government found to open an additional shelter or shelters is going to come at the expense of some other program(s) in Abbotsford. A scenario that has repeatedly played itself out in the mental health services provided by Fraser Health in the Fraser Valley.

As to question of ‘fair’:

  • There’s never going to be a system that is fair to everyone. Shannon Miller
  • If the world were so organized that everything has to be fair, no living creature could survive for a day. The birds would be forbidden to eat worms, and everyone’s self-interest would have to be served.  Unknown
  • Life isn’t fair. It’s just fairer than death, that’s all.William Goldman
  • Life is not fair; get used to it. Bill Gates
  • I know the world isn’t fair, but why isn’t it ever unfair in my favour? Bill Watterson

The provincial government and the citizens of BC have been living beyond our means on borrowed money and borrowed time. The BC government sought to pay back the $1.6 billion owed to Ottawa vis-a-vis HST over 5 years out of fear that borrowing the entire amount would result in the province’s credit rating being downgraded – driving interest costs up. The BC government can no longer deny or avoid financial reality by borrowing.

We have one shelter in Abbotsford and the reality is that one shelter is going to have to serve a variety of needs, to be multifunctional.

And before voices of accusation spake words along the lines of ‘that’s easy for you to say’ – I was a client of the shelter while Homeless in Abbotsford. A time when there was no cold wet weather protocols, no extra beds opened during inclement weather. You were out in the weather and had to hunker down and survive – or not.

The William Booth Emergency Shelter is the name of Abbotsford’s Shelter.

Emergency: a sudden, urgent, usually unexpected occurrence or occasion requiring immediate action.

In an emergency – such as a fire – that damages your home, emergency services will put you up in a hotel for 5 nights. During that period you are expected to assess the situation and make arrangements for any housing needed beyond the fifth night. The 5 day stay at a hotel is to allow you to catch your breath, get a handle on what you need to do and to take the first steps to get on with what you need to do to recover your life.

At the shelter you get 5 nights then must wait 30 days before you get another 5 nights. Without the 5 day limit the shelter would fill up and nobody else would be able to get in until someone failed to return on time or found other housing arrangements.

People who are in need of a place to stay for a night or two to permit things at home to cool off; those in recovery homes who had a slip and need a place to stay for several days until they can return to their program; people who are travelling and find themselves in Abbotsford (with no money) in need of a bed for a night before continuing their journey; those who are visiting someone, have no money to spare and need someplace to stay; those who have to come to Abbotsford Hospital for treatment yet lack money for a place to stay; all those who needed emergency access to the shelter for a few nights would find themselves without a place to stay because the shelter was full.

Yes, there is a need for the ability to stay more than 5 nights. Because Abbotsford’s shelter has to be multifunctional to serve the variety of client needs, those who need to stay more than 5 nights to achieve their goal can talk to a Case Manager about their goal and what they will do to achieve that goal. Case Managers can extent the clients time in the shelter – as long as the client is working to achieve their goal and complying with the rules.

Someone can be removed from their plan if they do not take the actions/do the work they agreed to do to achieve their goal (it is not unusual for a client to agree to a plan to get extra nights and then do nothing to achieve their goal); if they fail to be there at 6 PM when the shelter opens (unless they have  a reason and an agreement with the Case Manager as to returning later) or if their behaviour results in them being removed from the shelter (although a behaviour agreement addressing the behaviour issues may allow them to remain on their plan).

Those on their way to treatment are provided the nights required for them to get into the facility they are seeking treatment in.

The major problem/issue/barrier facing the Abbotsford shelter is the lack of accessible, affordable, supportive and healthy housing for clients using the shelter to move into.  Abbotsford lacks housing for those who remain caught in their addiction or mental illness or other issues. Without such housing to move onto/into, clients cycle in and out of the shelter.

Experience has demonstrated that having the stability provided by housing helps people move forward in dealing with issues having a negative impact on their lives. Even for those who will not change significantly, stable housing is beneficial – and results in significant $$$$$ savings to taxpayers.

My personal concern with a focus on shelter is ending up with the situation developing in Vancouver with shelters becoming an easy, cheap way to house the homeless/addicted/mentally ill by warehousing them.

Without unlimited resources we must set priorities, work with and get the most out of the resources we have.