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Raise the Rates says MLAs accepting the challenge would be engaging in real action research and gain understanding

Anti-poverty activists are challenging British Columbia’s elected provincial MLAs to take a challenge and live on $610 a month—the amount they expect many individuals living on welfare payments to get by with. But they’re only suggesting the well-paid politicians live for one month on an amount that is described by Jean Swanson as “keeping people in dire, dire poverty.”

The coalition wants welfare rates increased to the equivalent of what they were in 1986. The $700 a month a person might have received in 1986 would amount to about $1,300 today, over double the current rate. The group also wants inflation taken into consideration when rates are set. (more…)

Mental health, citizenship, and inclusion

June 2nd, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Mental health, citizenship, and inclusion)

A group of people diagnosed with schizophrenia conducted research about housing and its impacts on mental health

The struggle for housing stability is among the many challenges faced by people with schizophrenia. That struggle was the focus of a participatory action research project led by professor Barbara Schneider at the University of Calgary.

Participatory research involves members of a community group in meaningful participation in all stages of the research process, including developing the research question, gathering the data, analyzing the data, and disseminating and using the results. (more…)

Leadership hopefuls challenged

February 10th, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Leadership hopefuls challenged)

Faith groups ask that Liberal and NDP leadership candidates explain homelessness, housing positions

The Vancouver Interfaith Alliance to End Homelessness is calling on leadership candidates from B.C.’s NDP and Liberal parties to declare a commitment to end homelessness in BC by 2015. The Alliance is a non-partisan group whose members include over 60 diverse faith leaders representing community-based churches, mosques, temples, synagogues and spiritual centres from across Vancouver.

A letter delivered last week invited all leadership candidates to respond and make their positions clear. Responses to that letter will be made public this week. (more…)

Homeless shelter gets a rethink

January 20th, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Homeless shelter gets a rethink)

Nanaimo’s Unitarian Fellowship considers opening its extreme weather shelter every night to end of winter

The extreme weather shelter for homeless people in Nanaimo may be open every night for the rest of the winter, after city council approved a grant to pay for operating costs. The shelter had been opening intermittently, depending upon weather conditions such as the temperature or the amount of rainfall predicted for the city—while advocates had been lobbying for an every-night opening. The Unitarian Fellowship, which operates the shelter on Townsite Road, will consult its neighbours and assess whether an every night of the week opening will be possible. (more…)

Shelter strategy criticized

December 9th, 2010 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Shelter strategy criticized)

Nanaimo’s shelter and homelessness strategies need improvement, critics say

Extreme weather shelters in B.C. provide extra emergency shelter space during periods of winter weather when the health and safety of homeless individuals is threatened. Nanaimo’s low-barrier extreme weather shelter was opened earlier this year than in past due to changed  weather criteria. Despite the relaxed guidelines, one advocate wants to see a wet-weather shelter that is open more often. Community activist Wallace Malay has been lobbying the City of Nanaimo for a shelter that is open more often—or all winter long. He’s uploading videos to YouTube and circulating emails calling for a change in approach. (more…)

Fear and othering

November 4th, 2010 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Fear and othering)

Is a ‘tea party’ brewing against Nanaimo’s progressive homelessness solution?

A group of residents living in the Townsite Road area of Nanaimo are reportedly still fuming about plans to build units of housing to house homeless people in their neighbourhood. The hospital-area facility is one of five that will be built in Nanaimo [opens to PDF] after funding was received from the provincial government.

The Hospital Area Neighbourhood Association (HANA) hosted an information meeting October 21st and then appeared at a city council meeting on Monday October 25th to present a petition against the low-barrier facility planned for the area. (more…)