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Manitoba

Advocate eyes warming centres after mother of 4 found frozen outside

After a Winnipeg woman was found dead and frozen outside during the recent frigid weather, people who work on the front lines with the citys homeless population are strategizing to make sure no one else is found dead in the cold.

Focus now on getting city's homeless through the rest of the winter alive

Al Wiebe used to be homeless and says it's a good thing city non-profits are coming together to communicate in light of the death of Windy Sinclair. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

After the death of a Winnipeg woman found frozenoutside during a recent cold snap front-line workers at local shelters aretrying to find fixes they can get in place this winterto make sure no one else is left out in the cold.

Windy Sinclair, a 29-year-old mother of four, was found frozen outside a West Broadway apartment on Dec. 28, days after she left Seven Oaks Hospital, where she was getting help for her meth addiction. Sinclair wasn't homeless but news of her death has agencies who work with people living on the streets on high alert.

"What that did for us was put a very harsh reminder in front of all of us that the temperatures that we've seen throughout the city of Winnipeg over the last number of weeks and that we're going to continue to see for the rest of the winter are putting people's lives at danger," said Lorie English, the executive director of the West Central Women's Resource Centre.

Lorie English, the executive director of West Central Women's Resource Centre, says the death of Windy Sinclair was a very harsh reminder of the dangers of the cold weather. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)
English and Althea Guiboche, the manager ofthe cold weather strategy at End Homelessness Winnipeg,organized a meeting that took place Tuesday with front-lineworkersto see what can be done to get Winnipeg's homeless through the rest of the winter alive.
Windy Sinclair, a 29-year-old mother of 4, was found frozen outside a West Broadway apartment on Dec. 28. (Submitted/Chantelle Dreaver)

The one concrete step English would like to see taken in the near future: having existing agencies turninto warming centres outside of regular operating hours so no one is out in the cold.

"We're looking to not reinvent the wheel. We're hoping to be able to add capacities to some agencies that are already doing this work," English said after themeeting with representatives from other non-profits Tuesday.

Al Wiebe used to be homeless and heard about Tuesday's meeting at End Homelessness Winnipeg so he dropped in.

'I hope this generates something'

"I hope that this meeting generates something," Wiebe said outside the meeting, adding often there's talk and no real action.

He jumped off a bridge in a failed attempt to end his life while he was one of thecity's "hidden homeless" and credits a nurse at St. Boniface Hospital who showed him empathy with helping him to get off the streets.

"I was totally right at the end of my rope and I didn't know what I was going to do."

Empathy is the key to solving Winnipeg's homelessness problem, says Kelvin Johnston, who is currently living at Siloam Mission. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Having sympathy is something Kelvin Johnston, who is currently homeless, thinks could lead to a solution to the city's homeless problem.

His wish: for people to "stop looking at me like a bum and actually treat me like a person."

He thinks if more had compassion toward Winnipeg's homeless and gave them a fighting chance, more people would come off the streets.

"As soon as someone looks at you, they think the wrong thing. They don't take enough time to actually get to know you," he said, explaining how difficult it can be trying to find a place to rent.

With files from Austin Grabish