Former Victoria youth detention centre opens as homeless shelter
'It no longer feels like a jail. It feels like a home to them,' says operator
The locks are gone and the gate is always open at the former Victoria Youth Custody Centreas the space at 94 Talcott Rd. in View Royalhas been transformed as a homeless shelter with 50 units.
"I have a stable place to live for the first time in my entire life," said Kyle Wright who is now staying at the former youth detention centre. "I'm not homeless anymore."
Wright says he's now eating and sleeping again after being able to deal with addictions that forced him onto the streets, but he told CBC News that he was uneasy at first coming to live at what once was a jail.
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It's a stigma that Our Place Society, the organization which operates the shelter, has made effortsto dispelas volunteers helpedretrofit the space to accommodatepeople moving from Victoria's controversial tent city.
"They are getting more comfortable with it," said Don Evans with Our Place. "It no longer feels like a jail. It feels like ahome to them."
The facility offers outside camping space as well as beds in the former holding cells. Thesite also has a gym, a woodworking room, and an art room. Operators arerunning ashuttle into the city each day as well.
So far there are about 25 people staying in the space that has 50 shelter units.
Evans expects interest in the shelter will grow ifthe province is granted a court injunction to break up the tent city.
The province plans to keep the shelter at the formeryouth custody centre open for six months.
In 2014, the provincial government decided to shutter the custody centre, transferring youth in need of its services to a facility in Burnaby instead as a cost saving measure.
Additional shelter units will be available at the former #Victoria Youth Custody Centre building, https://t.co/bXzpYW4BDh @ourplacesociety
—@BCGovNews