The Daily Courier

Program needs gov’t support

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Dear Editor: The Emmanuel Church in West Kelowna hosted an outstandin­g musical big band night as a fundraiser for Freedom’s Door, an addiction recovery program in Kelowna.

This successful event brings to mind what a great opportunit­y a volunteer. not-for-profit charity can do with the help of the City of Kelowna, province and the federal government to solve the urgent and important homeless and addiction issue by working together in a simple and cost-effective way.

Kelowna is proposing a $47 million program to solve homelessne­ss; the province is spending a similar amount locally on “harm reduction addiction” programs; the federal government is pledging hundreds of millions to house people on low incomes; and Freedom’s Door has a need for $4 million to complete the $10million cost for its 52-unit residency project for its successful addiction program.

This is not the recovery program, but a transition back to the mainstream society for a group of people after successful­ly overcoming addictions at other locations.

The Freedom’s Door program has 15 years of experience in managing and rehabilita­ting homeless and addicted men from across the region. They follow a program similar to other successful recovery programs like Hope for Freedom, Teen Challenge (three locations), and others across the country.

They have establishe­d management and counsellin­g teams; a sound financial program to make it affordable for low-income workers; they have a solid, committed volunteer base and hundreds of graduates working within the community to assist. They have the respect of Kelowna’s council, which approved the rezoning needed for the future housing project; they have the support of several faith-based churches in the Okanagan.

Here is a shovel-ready project with a management team, a plan that works and solid community support. The money is there at a city, provincial and federal level if the political leaders are sincere about tackling addictions and homelessne­ss.

This becomes a low-risk, cost-effective, program that would not require more resources of the city or province. In fact, it would reduce policing, social services and hospitaliz­ation costs by the return to productive society of these men.

That has already been proven, so, in fact, the investment will be repaid through future cost reductions.

With a joint commitment of $1.4- million each from the three levels of government this urgently-needed project could be underway in weeks. We can only hope the political groups can see the benefits and act to unite in making this successful in a timely manner. Doug Waines West Kelowna

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