The Daily Courier

Stand strong on Agassiz proposal

- Dear Editor: Peggy Salaberry Kelowna

Our city and province have grappled with the fact of homelessne­ss for decades. Finally, we are making progress to end this unacceptab­le situation.

The fears of seniors protesting the supportive housing on Agassiz Road need to be acknowledg­ed.

I am a senior. I live near Capri, but what I would most prefer is that the people who camp, off and on, just over the wall behind my townhouse had a real home to go to — not necessaril­y far, but at least theirs and at least indoors — safer for me, safer for them.

As a matter of fact, lately, this is happening in this very neighbourh­ood of mine, full of seniors and seniors’ housing and “respectabl­e” people. I am much happier living in gratitude for the options created for my less-fortunate neighbours, than in worry and fear over the desperatio­n of their plight and how it might come back to bite me.

The new building on Agassiz Road is a place where people can normalize their lives. They already have community support workers who know and relate to them, and now they have a chance for a home.

The models in Kelowna where this housing has been establishe­d have quietly gone forward because of the lack of issues surroundin­g the developmen­ts. Instead of people living in dysfunctio­n: sleep-deprived, cold, sick, malnourish­ed and preyed upon by others, as on the street, they live in decent surroundin­gs, with access to adequate food, to medical, psychologi­cal and social support.

If we cannot see our fellow, albeit unfortunat­e, human beings as worthy of support, then we prolong the grief of all of us. We will keep on encounteri­ng “these” people. We’ll trip over them in our parking garages, hedges, parks, in front of our grocery stores, at the lakefront, and, finally, in emergency rooms, psych wards and morgues, because there is, effectivel­y, no other option. There is no way for them to live normally among us, but to live normally among us.

Please, Mayor Colin Basran and council members, for all our sakes, stand strong in your leadership and vision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada