Valley Journal Advertiser

‘Dignified shelter option’ coming for North Kentville

Tiny Shelter Village aims to be open before the end of winter

- KIRK STARRATT VALLEY JOURNAL-ADVERTISER kirk.starratt@saltwire.com

The Open Arms Resource Centre wants to have dialogue with people concerned over a shelter village soon to be establishe­d in North Kentville.

Twenty Pallet units will be set up at 136 Exhibition St. in North Kentville, on the provincial building property, and will be managed by the Open Arms Resource Centre. Pallet is a North American leader in rapid-response shelter villages designed and built by people with lived experience.

Department The Nova Scotia of Community Services announced in January that four Pallet villages would be establishe­d across the province, in Lower Sackville, Sydney, Halifax and at the Exhibition Street site.

“Wherever the site landed in our region, we were happy to partner with them to provide another dignified shelter option for folks in the local community,” said Open Arms director of operations Michelle Parker.

Adults from the Annapolis Valley who are currently homeless or at risk of homelessne­ss will reside at the village. These individual­s often face barriers to housing requiring support.

Parker said all the shelter villages would be fenced in, for the safety, privacy, and dignity of those who live there.

ABOUT THE SHELTER VILLAGE

The Tiny Shelter Village will include 20, one-bedroom units, washroom and laundry facilities, and a community building. The units, Pallet’s S2 Sleeper 70 model, measure 70 square feet.

Parker said the community building would include a communal kitchen. She said this is where guests would be able to connect with resources and develop a long-term plan for stability in housing, individual growth, and support.

Site selection included that the subject land was provincial­ly owned; relatively flat, close to existing sewer, water, and electrical services, grocery stores, public transporta­tion, health care and other profession­al services.

Open Arms hosted two informatio­n drop-ins at the subject property on Jan. 31.

Parker said it was an opportunit­y for them to share their excitement, have one-on-one conversati­ons, for people to ask questions and to share concerns. Their goal is to be, and to have, good neighbours.

She said the project involves “a rapid deployment” of shelter units that will be up before the end of winter. Although they don’t have a time limit on how long someone can stay in the shelters, Pallet villages are intended to be a temporary housing solution.

“We really like to meet people where they’re at, learn what their individual needs are, and get those support pieces put in place so folks are living safety, securely and hopefully we’re setting them up for long-term success,” Parker said.

She said they like to look ahead, focusing on possibilit­ies

experience­s and not necessaril­y the that someone had in the past. They work a lot with mental health and other profession­al services, a family doctor, community partners, not-for-profit organizati­ons, or whatever clients need to move forward on their own path.

Parker said they are happy to listen to people’s concerns, but she believes that a lot of them relate to a lack of informatio­n. They’ve heard concerns about safety and security, garbage, and washroom facilities, all of which are going to be taken care of within the village itself.

THERE FOR CLIENTS, COMMUNITY

Parker said nothing is ever perfect, but they want to assure the public Open Arms will be there for the clients and the community.

Open Arms Resource Centre shelter manager Amanda Hatt Gould has been managing the OASIS shelter on Bridge Street in Kentville for the past year-and-a-half. Parker said Hatt Gould played an integral role in its expansion from nine beds to 20.

Parker said Hatt Gould is from the community and would be managing the Tiny Shelter Village for the first year. Open Arms will staff the village with at least two trained profession­als, 24 hours a day.

Hatt Gould said she is really excited about the project. They were initially a bit nervous about the significan­t transition involved in expanding the Bridge Street shelter to 20 beds but “it has really flowed, and we learned along the way.”

She said she had a great team of staff members, and it was a great experience. Hatt Gould said she looks forward to developing another great

Shelter staff team for the Tiny Village and working with them.

“The flow down there (at the Bridge Street shelter) is so great now that I know we can duplicate that up here (on Exhibition Street),” Hatt Gould said.

Her hope is that shelter residents can gain a sense of

community, trust, build a sense of feel safe and dignified while they’re at the village and “to be able to feel like there is a future that is brighter than where they’ve been at.”

SHELTER VILLAGE CONCERNS

Fiona Willows organized a community meeting about the Pallet village, which was held at the Kentville fire hall on Feb. 7.

Prior to the meeting, Willows said it was “incredibly important” for residents of North Kentville to have a meeting with everyone involved in organizing the project.

She said that at no point were area residents involved in any consultati­on and they were not formally made aware of the project.

“It’s difficult for people to support a project that they know nothing about, especially when their phone calls and emails go unanswered,” Willows said.

She said her hope in organizing the meeting was that residents would be able to voice any concerns they may have and get questions answered. Willows hoped that all questions and concerns would be taken seriously and “not brushed off in a passive aggressive manner like they have been so far.” She also hoped that accommodat­ions would be made in project plans to address concerns.

Willows said that, after many residents voiced “valid, evidence-based concerns” on matters like safety and potential property damage, the project wasn’t considered appropriat­e for downtown Kentville. She wonders how the provincial government concluded that it was OK to move the shelter village to an area that could be considered even more residentia­l.

“If it’s not OK in one residentia­l area, then it shouldn’t be OK in another, no matter the average income of that neighbourh­ood,” Willows said.

She said she has seen and read a lot about tiny shelter villages, many of which are very successful. Willows said she would love to see that here, but she doesn’t have confidence in the organizers.

She said at the very least, moving it somewhere like the Chipman building in the Kentville Industrial Park “may alleviate some of the serious concerns that many residents and business owners of North Kentville have.”

 ?? KIRK STARRATT ?? Open Arms Resource Centre shelter manager Amanda Hatt Gould, left, and director of operations Michelle Parker recently attended an informatio­n session hosted by Open Arms at the site of a Pallet shelter village to be establishe­d on Exhibition Street in North Kentville.
KIRK STARRATT Open Arms Resource Centre shelter manager Amanda Hatt Gould, left, and director of operations Michelle Parker recently attended an informatio­n session hosted by Open Arms at the site of a Pallet shelter village to be establishe­d on Exhibition Street in North Kentville.

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