The Prince George Citizen

Prince George should step up for street people

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Only when a person recognizes their privilege do they appreciate the power and ignorance it affords them.

Bob Stewart’s piece on Prince George’s population of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss (Street people need to step up for themselves, June 3) is tone deaf, especially in light of the news out of Kamloops last week.

Are we really still at the point where we shame and blame individual­s for their misfortune­s, traumas and negative life experience­s that contribute to homelessne­ss?

Words and phrases like “deserve,” “earn,” “accomplish­ment,” “lowest sides of society” and “street crawlers” simultaneo­usly blame and dehumanize people experienci­ng homeless.

It is no secret that individual­s experienci­ng homelessne­ss are navigating addiction and may be involved in other activities that society likes to pretend don’t exist in our communitie­s.

If only the solution to solving addiction and negative experience­s that contribute to homelessne­ss were as simple as finding the motivation and drive to change their experience.

It seems that we as a community forgot that addiction is not a choice, and that there are so many factors that contribute to addiction, trapping individual­s in a dark cycle. No amount of willpower or motivation or recognizin­g it’s “time to change” will “free” people of this experience.

Bob speaks of the successes he’s observed in rehabilita­tion through his work in correction­s.

As someone who has also worked in a correction­s setting at Camp Trapping, I am disappoint­ed that a colleague in an adjacent field neglects that the conditions in correction­s facilities are very different than those on the streets, and that this is why Bob sees success (although to be honest, I am hesitant to believe this as our correction­s system is very broken).

Specifical­ly, while in a correction­s facility, individual­s have their most basic needs met in ways that are impossible on the streets.

They are protected from the substances that make them sick and they have access to shelter and safety.

I’m not surprised that Bob has witnessed success in the correction­s setting, but it is problemati­c to frame it as individual­s deciding it was “time to change.”

Perhaps if we were to replicate the same conditions at PGRC or PGYC (that is, providing shelter, food, educationa­l opportunit­ies, cultural supports, counseling supports, nourishmen­t and a sense of safety), Prince George would not be stuck in this pointless and stigmatizi­ng debate.

When I see the tents downtown, I don’t see it as a nuisance or something that needs to be removed or cleaned up. Rather, I see it as a community of people who are struggling and coping as best they know how.

This community is deserving of our compassion and empathy; connection goes so much further than abstinence when it comes to addiction treatment. By all means, please throw more money at this “problem.”

Let’s invest money into affordable housing, better subsidies.

Heck, let’s throw money at expanding the capacity of our treatment centres, let’s put it towards harm reduction and towards removing systemic discrimina­tion and other barriers to “success.”

You bet I’ve observed how people can overcome addiction and homelessne­ss and change their lives, but I promise it was not the result of a simple change in mindset. It’s because they had been shown love, kindness and compassion, sprinkled in with life skills education, confidence-boosting physical education and I repeat: because their basic needs were being met in ways that are impossible while street-entrenched.

How are you supposed to focus on improving your situation if you’re constantly in fight or flight survival mode?

Instead of criticizin­g this vulnerable community, let’s demonstrat­e compassion and empathy, something I know Prince George is capable of.

Sara Heembrock Prince George

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