Toronto Star

Furniture Bank turns bare houses into homes for families in need

- TAMAR HARRIS STAFF REPORTER

A townhouse with only an overturned milk carton and three sleeping bags was transforme­d into a furnished home for Martin Train and his family.

Train and his family lived in the Beaches before personal and financial struggles led to them losing their home.

“I wound up homeless and I was living in a shelter,” Train told the Star.

“Eventually, I found a place after a few weeks . . . it was a townhouse in Leslievill­e. We’re sitting there, me and my two children, Liam and Caitlyn, we’re sitting on the floor and all we had was a milk crate and three sleeping bags.”

“And I was wondering, what am I going to do? I had no idea where to go or what to do,” Train said.

Train and his family were referred to the Furniture Bank, a charity that provides gently used furniture and household goods to people in need.

Founded in 1998, they are celebratin­g their 20th anniversar­y this year. Last year, they helped over 10,400 people and provided 1,500 tonnes of furniture.

Three-and-a-half years ago, the Furniture Bank was a saving grace for the Train family. Within days, they went from sleeping on the floor to each child having their own bed — “a magical transforma­tion,” Train said.

“It’s so demoralizi­ng as a parent if you don’t have a bed for your child,” he explained. “And the fact that they provided that was just unbelievab­le for me.

Train’s entire townhome was furnished from the Furniture Bank.

“The reason the (dining) table and chairs are my favourite piece is because that’s where we actually sit down — and we’ve been doing that for years — and we sit down and we actually have a meal, we talk and, when my fiancée comes down with her son, we have a big dinner at the table,” Train said.

And since their townhouse was furnished, everything has been “so positive,” Train said.

Tarun Mehta, his wife, Nidhi, and their 5-year-old daughter visited the Furniture Bank earlier this month, a trip he called “amazing.”

After emigrating in September from India, the Mehta family pulled together some essentials for their home themselves — a dining room table and some other necessitie­s.

Mehta said they picked up “more cosmetic things” at the Furniture Bank, including chairs, a desk, a couple of lamps and a coffee table.

Mehta is working a couple parttime jobs while taking classes in mathematic­s. Once his family is more settled, he and his wife have agreed to give back to the community that helped them.

Nearly all of the Furniture Bank clients have secured housing and “they’ve got keys to an empty apartment,” said Dan Kershaw, executive director of the Furniture Bank, “but they don’t have a home yet.”

Outfitting an empty apartment from scratch costs about $5,000, Kershaw said. That’s a high and often inaccessib­le price for the Furniture Bank’s clients, who include people transition­ing out of homelessne­ss, women and children escaping abuse, newcomers and refugees and others in need of a fresh start.

Clients must be referred to the Furniture Bank through a partner agency. An allotted amount of furniture is free, and clients must pay a fee, typically ranging from $100 to $200, for delivery.

“Every day, we allow 20 families to come in and be whatever they’re meant to be,” Kershaw said.

“It’s really about dignity.”

 ??  ?? Martin Train and his family received help from Furniture Bank for their townhouse in Leslievill­e.
Martin Train and his family received help from Furniture Bank for their townhouse in Leslievill­e.
 ??  ?? Before and after photos of a room furnished by the Furniture Bank.
Before and after photos of a room furnished by the Furniture Bank.
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