Proposal dies to seek funds to increase security at Saint John container-site shelters - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 08:32 PM | Calgary | 1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Proposal dies to seek funds to increase security at Saint John container-site shelters

A proposal for Saint Johncouncil to ask for 24/7 supervision from the provincial government for an uptownshipping container shelter sitefailed after a vote.

Coun. Paula Radwan says she was prompted by safety concerns from residents who live and work in the area.

Woman wearing hijab with back to bookcase.
Coun. Paula Radwan wanted funding for Fresh Start services, the non-profit that operates the shelter site, to be onsite around the clock. The site is supervised by volunteers currently, she says. (Nipun Tiwari/CBC)

A proposal for Saint Johncouncil to ask for 24/7 supervision from the provincial government for an uptownshipping container shelter sitefailed after a Tuesdaynight council vote.

Coun. Paula Radwan proposalurged the mayor to write to the provincial government to make the request for theWaterloo Street pilot project. Launched in March, the project turned six shipping containers into micro-suites, with electricityand beds, to shelter 12 individuals.

When she first introduced the proposal last month, Radwanwantedfunding for Fresh Start services, the non-profit thatoperates the site, to be onsite around the clock. The site is supervised by volunteers currently, shesaid.

Speaking with reporters following the meeting, Radwan said she was prompted by residents who live and work in the area who expressedsafety concerns.

"I've had a lot of residents get a hold of me, a lot of Horizon staff as well," she said.

"They park up in the cathedral parking lot ... they're not even feeling safe going to their cars or going to St.Joseph's Hospital from their cars."

A shipping container structure is loaded into a parking lot under supervision by a man in a red truck.
Six temporary shelters, constructed out of modified shipping containers, were installed between Waterloo and Exmouth streets on land owned by local non-profit Kaleidoscope Social Impact. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

A staff report saidthe provincial government does not have jurisdiction to provide onsite support for the project, which is ona vacant lot owned by Kaleidoscope Social Impact group.

Funding provided to the Fresh Start outreach team enables it to visit and support clients at this location multiple times aday, between 7 a.m. and 2 a.m., and the team is on call when the site isn't staffed. There are also security cameras, which are reviewed regularly.

Radwan's proposal "died, basically," shesaid.

"So [city] staff have come back and said ... the province is not going to pay for security and have just advised that volunteers are overseeing the site if theyget called, they're usually on site within fiveto 10 minutes, and that was sufficient."

The shelters were launched as part of a response to the deaths of three individuals this past winter resulting from homeless encampment fires and one person who lost part of his leg to frost bite.

The staff report to council said there have been circumstances both on the site and surrounding communityinvolving police and fire services.

Staff Sgt. Matthew Weir saidthere have been roughly 70 calls to the police from the site since November. He saidhe doesn't have specificinformation regarding the nature of the calls, but thinks they were largely medical in nature.

The Saint John Fire Department says it hasresponded 30 times to the site in the last 3 months.

A woman in a pink scarf and a blue Irving jacket stands in front of modified shipping containers.
Melanie Vautour, executive director of Fresh Start, says the answer lies in requesting more funding for housing and supports to address homelessness. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Melanie Vautour, the executive director of Fresh Start, said in an email statement that she appreciates Radwan's concerns.

"However she did not reach out to speak with me directly before presenting the motion," Vautoursaid, adding that security often escalates situations.

"We approach working with individuals through respectful dialogue and our relationships.We have security systems, cameras and staff are frequently present at the site."

Vautour said the answer lies in requesting more funding for housing and supports to address challenges in homelessness.

"Security, authority and enforcement will not reduce or end it," she said.

Radwan said even though her proposaldied, Mayor Donna Reardonsaid previously there are officers in the area on foot patrol.

"The only thing that made me feel comfortable was the fact that the mayor ... mentioned that the provincial government did pay to have four other police officers to be walking the beat uptown."

"So hopefully that'll help kind of diffuse the situation."