Winnipeg Indigenous-led organization, safe space to expand with $6.9M funding from Ottawa - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:54 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Winnipeg Indigenous-led organization, safe space to expand with $6.9M funding from Ottawa

An Indigenous-led safe space for sexually exploitedwomen and girls is expecting to expand its reach in Winnipeg with funds from the federal government.

New funds will allow Ka Ni Kanichihk's safe space, Velmas House, to provide 24/7 care

Federal ministers Marci len, Patty Hajdu, and Dan Vandal made the funding announcement on Monday alongside Ka Ni Kanichihk executive director Dodie Jordaan. (Fernand Detillieux/CBC)

An Indigenous-led safe space for sexually exploitedwomen and girls is expecting to expand its reach in Winnipeg with funds from the federal government.

Ottawa says nearly $7 million is to help with operating costs at Velma's House.

Patty Hajdu, the federal minister of Indigenous Services, says the money should allow the organization to increase its capacity anddeliver culturally appropriate programs.

Part of the money is also to go toward purchasing a new building, so the group can offer ceremonies, counselling and meals to morepeople.

The home opened in the spring of 2021 and has since outgrown its current location.

Dodie Jordaan, executive director of Ka Ni Kanichihk, which oversees Velma's House, says the new location is expected to open bythe end of the year.

"The space was so small. So many women were sleeping on the porch and laying in the grass and waiting to take turns to comein," she said Monday.

"It was critical that we found a larger space in a space that was much more inviting and able to meet the needs of the womenaround."

WATCH | Announcement about funds forVelma's House:

Safe space in Winnipeg to expand with $6.9M funding boost

2 years ago
Duration 2:14
Funds will allow Velmas House to provide 24/7 care to Winnipeg women and children.

Staff said it's the only low-barrier place in Winnipeg offering supports for women who have been sexually exploited.

The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls called for governments to fund Indigenous-centred andcommunity-based health and wellness services.

Hajdu said money given to Velma's House is part of the federal government's plan to address violence against Indigenous women,girls and two-spirited people.

"The work that (Ka Ni Kanichihk) does is not just a nice to have, this is the core of a community. This is the foundation of acommunity where people feel that they have a place to go to when bad things happen," she said.

A total of $4 million is to go toward operating costs to 2026.

Jordaan said the funding should allow the space to operate 24 hours a day and provide resources for up to 60 people at a time. Theprevious space allowed up to 10 people at a time.