Restaurateur calls on Yellowknife businesses to open washrooms to public - Action News
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Restaurateur calls on Yellowknife businesses to open washrooms to public

A restaurateur in Yellowknife is looking to partner with the city and downtown businesses to open up existing washrooms to the public.

Jason Perrino, co-owner of Twist and Shout, is hopeful City of Yellowknife will help fund initiative

The washroom at Twist and Shout is open to the public. The owners of the restaurant want other Yellowknife businesses to follow suit. (CBC)

A restaurateur in Yellowknife is looking to partner with the city and downtown businesses to open up existing washrooms to the public.

Most washroomsin downtown Yellowknife are locked,including the two washrooms in the Centre Square Mall.

The call for better access to washrooms in the downtown was noted in the city's plan to revitalize the area.However, the $1.9 million project was removed from the 2017 budget due to a lack of a clear path forward.

The owners of Twist and Shout, a downtown Yellowknife restaurant and nightclub, believe they have a cheaper solution for the city.

"My doors are already open. What if we partnered together in some way where you paid for toilet paper, hand soap, and a nominal fee of some kind," said Jason Perrino, co-owner of Twist and Shout.

"If you partnered with all the small businesses that exist downtown, and opened all the bathrooms downtown, rather than only having one bathroom in one mall that everybody uses you would have everybody who'd have access to bathrooms."

'I cant solve the problem myself. It takes a community,' says Jason Perrino, co-owner of Twist and Shout. (CBC)

Perrino sent his pitch to the city in an email. He is awaiting a response.

"I can't solve the problem myself. It takes a community," he said.

Taking action

Perrinoand his partner took over the Twist restaurant in 2015. At that time, Perrino said homeless or street people would commonly defecate in the alley behind the building, and disrupt deliveries.

"Sometimes we weren't able to get deliveries because people were using our back area as a bathroom. We had to clean it up, and we figured why are we cleaning two spaces when we could only clean one space," Perrino said.

Perrino said his washrooms have been open to the public for the last two years.

He said, on average, five non-paying customers use the washrooms daily, and without incident.

The alley behind Twist and Shout. Perrino say homeless or street people would commonly defecate here, and disrupt deliveries. (CBC)

"Our bathroom doors are not locked. They are actually propped open," Perrino added.

"We just go in and make sure there is enough soap, sort of make sure that people are using the facilities like they are supposed to, and we leave."

Perrino admits not all washrooms may be suited for public use, like single occupant water closets that lock. He said washrooms that lock are problematic because it is harder for staff tocheck in on the space.

Perrinohopes other Yellowknifebusinesses will join his initiative, with or without city funds.

However, the Yellowknife Chamber of Commerce has declined to participate.

"We don't open our own bathrooms to the public," said Deneen Everett, executive director for the Yellowknife Chamber of Commerce.

"We have had our own problems here... we wish him success"

The City of Yellowknife currently provides public washrooms during business hours at city hall, thepublic library, and seasonallyat the Somba K'e Civic Plaza.

The Salvation Army, Centre for Northern Families, and Safe Harbour Day Shelter provide washroom facilities for Yellowknife's homeless and less fortunate.

The Safe Harbour Day Shelter extended its hours on January 1, 2017to eliminate any gaps in services between the shelters.