Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 25, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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NEWS I FRONT AND CENTRE
SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 2025
‘Being poor is a full-time job’
T
HE clock on the wall reads
9:15 p.m. as Kyle Morrisseau
projects his booming voice
to announce the house rules to this
evening’s shelter guests: no fights or
unruly behaviour, no bulky items in
the washrooms and if guests leave
the building to go for a smoke after 11
p.m., they can’t get back in.
The last point is met with some
backlash, albeit light-hearted, from the
few dozen people ready to settle in for
the night in the basement of Augustine
United Church in Osborne Village.
Chris Baron, who has sought shelter on
this night, argues they should be cut
some slack on the last point.
“We gotta work on that one!” Baron
hollers at Morrisseau, who shakes it
off while everyone gets comfortable,
watches a movie on the TV or faces off
over a game of chess in the recreation
room. Some are already fast asleep,
while others such as Baron tinker
with their personal belongings or chat
amongst themselves.
Morrisseau moves to the kitchen to
prepare the evening snack, which is
pizza tonight, along with bananas and
water to wash it down.
The mood is more like that of a
sleepaway camp, not a shelter. Some
say it’s because the rules at Just a
Warm Sleep shelter, run by 1JustCity,
are simple: be safe, respectful and
responsible.
● ● ●
BARON, who jokingly refers to him-
self as the shelter’s No. 1 troublemaker,
is surrounded by his personal belong-
ings, which he carries around on the
street each day. He’s allowed to bring
everything inside because the policy
is to welcome people with everything
they have and store it. It means they
don’t have to sleep with one eye open to
make sure their possessions won’t be
stolen in the middle of the night.
Showers, laundry service, individual
bathrooms, storage lockers and phone
chargers are some of the other ame-
nities at the space that was renovated
by 1JustCity in 2021 when it moved its
drop-in centre, Oak Table, from the
upstairs to the church basement.
The amenities were added to provide
people with a warm, dignified expe-
rience at a homeless shelter, in a city
where its use is rapidly increasing. In
its 2022 street census, End Homeless-
ness Winnipeg counted 1,256 homeless
people, an increase from 1,127 in 2021.
“We did this renovation not based on
any soup kitchen and not based on any
shelter that we’d ever seen,” said 1Just-
City executive director Glynis Quinn.
“We wanted a space where people
would see this as their space and the
space was welcoming and beautiful.”
Its limited capacity of 30 people per
night and its straightforward opera-
tion mean there’s been little damage
to the building or harassment toward
staff because people see it as their own
space and take care of it, Quinn said.
Grace Bashir, Oak Table’s housing
and shelter lead, said clients often tell
her they feel safe in the space.
Quinn said because clients like
staying there and all the shelter has to
offer, they abide by the rules so they
can come back.
The single-stall washrooms are
cleaned often and laundry service and
showers are offered daily, which is
especially important for users.
“We’re a First World country and
our folks often have to, you know,
have Third World conditions because
they’re unsheltered,” Quinn said.
When they developed new wash-
rooms, 1JustCity imagined a space
where people felt like they could put
down their belongings and relax for a
few minutes. Organizers knew most of
the users would need to take more time
in the washroom.
“So we knew we needed a lot of
them,” Quinn said.
They also have a “dignity wash-
room” near the entrance to the shelter
so people can stop in to use it instead
of begging store owners for access to
a washroom or relieving themselves
outside.
After installing laundry machines, a
repairman told the crew they had put
four years of use on the washers in just
one year – a testament to the desperate
need for the service.
Support workers help clients with
paperwork to get their identification,
ride with them on the city bus to
appointments so they are on time, and
celebrate holidays and birthdays.
“Why wouldn’t we? There’s someone
who just needs a little help to make it
along the way, and if we have the ca-
pacity to be able to do that, why would
we say no?” Quinn said.
“Being poor is a full-time job. It
takes so much effort just to make it
through your day and if we can ease
that burden even a little bit, we’ll do
that.”
Even though he has a case worker
with Main Street Project, Baron choos-
es to sleep at the Osborne Village site
because it provides peace of mind.
“There’s gang activity (elsewhere), I
feel much safer being here,” he said.
Baron has gone to the shelter on and
off since he was stabbed in the throat
at a Winnipeg Burger King in April
2024 during a dispute with another
patron. Since the incident, Baron pre-
fers to sleep in group settings such as
a shelter or encampment, but is choosy
about where he goes.
“Would way rather be here,” he said.
● ● ●
BEFORE Morrisseau began working
at Oak Table as a community safety
host, he said he had certain ideas
about homeless people — which have
changed.
“I started seeing that these peo-
ple are actually like a community of
people who come together, take care
of each other, even if they don’t have
much,” he said.
“These people who have almost
nothing will give up whatever they
have, even if it’s a shirt on their back
to make sure someone else in their
situation isn’t suffering as bad. It just
kind of made me feel like I was a part
of something special.”
Currently, he works days during
drop-in hours and evenings during the
overnight intake because he admires
the community the centre has built.
“Working here helped me hone my
gifts in a sense of connecting with
people,” he said.
● ● ●
DURING the day, Oak Table hosts
lunch and offers social services. The
drop-in centre serves meals to about
160 guests per day. On Fridays the
menu is elevated and tablecloths and
centrepieces adorn the tables.
Lately, client Carlos Navas has
helped to clean up around the place in
the afternoon before the tables are dis-
assembled to make room for sleeping
mats.
Navas has been homeless for five
weeks. A death in the family, being laid
off from his job at Kitchen Craft and
burning through his savings to stay
housed landed him on the street.
“It was just one thing after another
and I don’t think anyone can recover
from that many hits at once,” he said.
He looks for work between staying
at the shelter, connects to the Wi-Fi at
places like The Forks and then comes
back in the evening to settle in.
When Navas was welcomed with
open arms to Oak Table and Just a
Warm Sleep, he began looking at oth-
ers in his situation with compassion,
not judgment.
“When you’re here your mind starts
thinking, ‘how did everyone else get
here?’ Everybody has a different
story,” he said. “I’m just kind of hoping
to come out of this a little bit wiser, a
little bit stronger and hopefully grab a
couple of people with me to the other
side.”
The drop-in centre and shelter have
built a community in a neighbourhood
that’s experienced hardship in recent
years.
Osborne Village was one of several
neighbourhoods to get extra police of-
ficers as part of a retail theft initiative
after incidents of theft and violence
spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Once known for its boutique aesthet-
ic and bar scene, the area has been hit
by an increase in crime. Data from the
Winnipeg Police Service shows a 44.6
per cent increase in illegal activity in
the area from 2022 to 2023.
Quinn said the rise in methamphet-
amine use changed the neighbourhood
but seems to have decreased this
winter.
Previously, they had to use naloxone
once a week, either on a client or on
someone on the street who has over-
dosed after taking an opioid.
“There’s the foot patrol that’s helped,
as well as we do community outings
where we check in with people and
businesses and let them know what
type of services we provide so the
community isn’t walking around judg-
ing or staring at somebody. (Instead),
they can advise or help them and let
them know where they can go,” Bashir
said.
● ● ●
WHILE the shelter model seems ideal,
Quinn and Bashir said they don’t want
to recreate it again.
They are optimistic about the prov-
ince’s new strategy to help the home-
less find permanent shelter by moving
encampment residents into housing.
Beginning in February, one encamp-
ment will be handled at a time, to
transfer people into hundreds of new
social housing units. The new strategy
is being led by Tessa Blaikie White-
cloud, who was CEO of Siloam Mission
from November 2021 until recently
being hired as the premier’s senior ad-
viser on ending chronic homelessness.
Blaikie Whitecloud was a fund director
of 1JustCity, which was started by the
United Church, from 2014 to 2018, at
which time she became its executive
director.
Quinn and Bashir said any effort to
tackle the homeless issue must include
the shelter community and homeless
people themselves.
They also said the plan needs to in-
volve all three levels of government to
ensure it is financially sustainable.
“We know that it doesn’t work mak-
ing plans for people that they have to
fit in to. We need to make plans with
people,” Quinn said.
nicole.buffie@freepress.mb.ca
NICOLE BUFFIE
Overnight shelter
offers comfort, safety
from stress of living
on the street
Shelter host Fatima Sheriff checks in a person who needs a bed on a recent night.
Safety guides the shelter’s rules.
Thirty people can be accommodated in the space.
PHOTOS BY JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
Chris Baron talks about his experiences as people settle in for the night at Just a Warm Sleep in the basement of Augustine United Church in Osborne Village.
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