Sudbury's Homelessness Network searching for housing for men after shelter closes - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:58 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Sudbury

Sudbury's Homelessness Network searching for housing for men after shelter closes

The closing New Life Centre will leave a gap in emergency services for homeless men in the City of Greater Sudbury.The Salvation Army announced the closing of the mens shelter on Tuesday.

The city will be working with community partners to find a place for about twenty men

The emergency men's shelter will close May 10. (Jamie-Lee McKenzie/CBC)

The City of Sudbury's Homelessness Network is working on finding a solution for men who will be without a place to go when a men's shelter closes in May.

The Salvation Army announced the closing of its men's shelter, New Life Centre,on Tuesday.

It offers 22 beds for men age 20 and older.

Major Bruce Shirran the Executive Director of the centre says closing the doors was a hard decision to make but necessary forfinancial reasons. The building is old and there is no money to renovate or relocate, he said.

Whenthe New Life Centre closes on May 10, 2019, it will leave a gap in services.

Gail Spencer is the Coordinator of Shelters and Homelessness with the City of Greater Sudbury. (Markus Schwabe/CBC)

There will be no emergency shelter availablefor men until the Off The Street (OTS) Emergency Shelter, which is operated by the Canadian Mental Health Association, opens in November for the winter.

It is currently being renovated.

"Between now and May we'll be working with our community partners to see if we can mend or change or find a solution to meet that gap," Gail Spencer, the Coordinator of Shelters and Homelessness for the city said.

"We're mandated to provide homelessness services and we certainly would like to ensure that we have an emergency shelter available for anyone who needs it," she said.

The city's Homelessness Network will be contacting the men currently living in the shelter to help them find permanent housing, which Spencer says is always the goal.

"We always work from a housing first strategy where we believe emergency shelters should be available when needed but we would always focus on permanent housing and supporting people that have experienced homelessness to get to permanent housing quickly and be accommodated with the right type of supports to help them stay housed," said Spencer.

The eight week timeline to get people out of the New Life Centre and into new housing is leaving some of the men living at the shelter worried.

Patrick Godin lives at the New Life Centre. He says he's worried about finding housing before the shelter closes on May 10. (Jamie-Lee McKenzie/CBC)

"We need help, like theres so many people that are in situations where, now where do we turn, who do we talk to,are they going to send us in the right direction or are they just going to kind ofsweep us away like they've always done, kind ofhide the problem," said Patrick Godin who has been living at the shelter for a little more than a week.

He saidhe's been walking around the city looking for places that might be for rent,hoping to find more permanent housing before the shelter closes in May.But he saidthat might not be as easy for others.

"Some of us in here have mental issues or somebody has physical issues, and you know there's alot of seniors in here too who aren't capable really of hitting the ground looking around," he said.

Spencer says it'sunfortunate to see the New Life Centre closing as they have been providing emergency shelterfor men in the city for many years.

"Sudbury's a very caring community and we will be there to provide them with supports, one-on-one, on a case-by-case basis as much as possible," said Spencer.