Regina Leader-Post

‘At least we have each other’: mom and son appeal for help after eviction

- ALEX MacPHERSON amacpherso­n@postmedia.com twitter.com/macpherson­a

SASKATOON Mary-Ann McLeod and her son Jonathan are wearing every piece of clothing they own.

Their few remaining belongings are packed into a blue nylon duffel bag and a small backpack. They have $14 between them and nothing but another night on the street, huddling together for warmth in the autumn air, to look forward to.

“At least we have each other,” said Mary-Ann, tears streaming down her face and onto the collar of her black fleece jacket.

Four days earlier, Saskatoon Health Region inspectors deemed their squalid apartment on Avenue F South — for which they paid $918 per month — unfit for human occupation.

They were subsequent­ly evicted. “We were in shock, but we went out peacefully. After that it just (happened) so fast,” Mary-Ann said of their departure from the apartment, where she and Jonathan slept on the floor, wrapped in blankets to avoid the cockroache­s while a pair of electric heaters barely offset the draught from a broken, boarded-up window.

The McLeods, who are Metis and rely on the Saskatchew­an Assured Income for Disability (SAID) program for support, have spent the last four nights sleeping outside.

Jonathan said neither he nor his mother have had the opportunit­y to bathe since Friday, and that pushing the wheelchair she has spent the last four years using left his feet blistered and his hands raw. Jonathan, who has cerebral palsy and severe arthritis, said he asked the provincial Ministry of Social Services for help back in July but that his letter wasn’t answered until this month.

The government’s response, a copy of which was provided to Postmedia News, includes informatio­n about several low-income housing services and asked for a meeting on Sept. 28

‘WE’RE ON OUR OWN’

“We just came back from a meeting with them. They told us that because we’re single they’re not going to help us out at all. We’re on our own,” Jonathan said Monday — the meeting was moved forward — adding that while he and MaryAnn have heard housing might be available at the start of next month, they are still waiting for confirmati­on. They’re not optimistic.

“With the government refusing to help us, we can only be outside,” he said before adding: “All we’re asking for is a hotel room, just one room, just until we know that we can move in (to permanent affordable housing) on Oct. 1.”

In the meantime, he continued, he feels helpless and his mother — whom he refuses to leave — is just scared.

Jeff Redekop, the Ministry of Social Services’ executive director of income assistance, said in an interview that while he cannot comment specifical­ly on the McLeods’ situation due to privacy legislatio­n, the government’s primary obligation is to provide people using the SAID program with informatio­n about housing options, but “typically ” allow them to make their own decisions.

The ministry is aware that people using the program have different levels of capability, Redekop said, and works hard to maintain a “very good network” of organizati­ons that can provide short- and longterm housing options, including hotels rooms, for people. The ministry follows up, especially in cases where properties are “placarded” by health authoritie­s, he added.

Saskatchew­an NDP Social Services critic Nicole Rancourt said the government has an obligation to ensure the province’s most vulnerable citizens — especially those on the SAID program, which is open to people with “a significan­t and enduring disability that is of a permanent nature (and) substantia­lly impacts daily living activities” — have a safe place to live.

“I don’t think that’s unmanageab­le,” the MLA for Prince Albert Northcote said, adding that while it is vital that the government dedicate sufficient resources to helping the most at-risk and vulnerable people in society, it is equally important for everyone else to pay attention to how people less fortunate than themselves are treated.

“The majority of people, if they knew about a situation like this, they wouldn’t want the family to be in the position that they’re in …

“But a lot of families are working to make ends meet, and so they have a hard time (paying) attention to what’s happening for our most vulnerable.

“But I think people in Saskatchew­an … this is not what we want to see our province turn into.”

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