Moncton group that helps homeless gets eviction notice - Action News
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New Brunswick

Moncton group that helps homeless gets eviction notice

The Humanity Project in Moncton is being evicted from the former Moncton Curlers' Association building.

Humanity Project served 30-day notice to vacate so Curl Moncton can sell building

Humanity Project founder Charles Burrell says the organization will continue its work helping homeless people, even if it has to work out of a parking lot. (Matt Tunnacliffe/CBC)

The Humanity Project in Monctonis being evicted by Curl Moncton from the former Moncton Curlers' Association building.

CharlieBurrell, the founder of the group dedicated to helping the homeless, wasserved with a 30-day eviction notice on Monday.

The organization has operated from the building for 15 months, but its efforts to buy the building fell through in February, when Monctoncity council rejected its request for a $200,000 loan.

Curl Moncton wants the building sold so it can access the equity it holds in the building to expand its location at the corner of Lockhart and Essex streets.

Burrell doesn't know where the organization is going to end up.

"We've spent the last three months looking for places," he said. "They're either not feasible for what we need them for, or they are way out of our price range."

But Burrell vowed to keep pushing forward.

"Whether we're in another building or whether we're in a parking lot, we can't leave people in our city to go hungry."

Burrell said he plans to launch a fundraising page this week to try to raise the necessary funds "to do it on our own."

"If we don't have a place, the impact will be we'll be in a parking lot in the rain and in the bad weather, serving people and trying to give them the stuff they need," he said.

"We'll be operating out of 10 people's houses, like we did before. It's not an ideal situation."

In addition to feeding about 150 people a day, the Humanity Project providesfree clothing, furniture, survival items andfood boxes for families in emergency situations.

With files from Information Morning Moncton