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Yellowknife's homeless give ideas on how to improve the system

The CBC reached out to homeless people in Yellowknife to see what ideas they have for easing the city's homelessness crisis. Here's what they said.

Calls for Inuit-only shelter, making Stanton Territorial Hospital into housing

Using the current Stanton Territorial Hospital as a space to house homeless people once the new Stanton Hospital is fully operational by 2019 is just one idea Yellowknife's homeless have for easing Yellowknife's homelessness crisis. (Sara Minogue/CBC)

In advance of a territorial government-led meeting next week with officials from the City of Yellowknife, downtown businesses and NGOsto discussYellowknife's homelessness crisis, theCBC went to the Safe Harbour DayCentre to ask homeless people what they themselves think should be done.

Caroline Cochrane, the minister responsiblefor addressing homelessness, hassaid theterritorial governmentdoes not have additional funding for new programs and will need to come up with creative solutions

Here are some ideas by the people most directly affected by Yellowknife's homelessness crisis.

F.L., a former diamond mine worker who preferred not to share his name, says Stanton Territorial Hospital could be used as a space to house elders in addition to homeless people. (CBC)

F.L., who did not want to give his full name, says he has been homeless since November 2015. He says he lost his job at one of the territory's diamond mines after he suffered a heart attackand that heis addicted to alcohol and pills.

"Right now they are building a brand new hospital," saidF.L. "The old one could be for old folks or homeless people. It's got lots of rooms in there."

Trained carpenter James Thrasher would like a program offering people the opportunity to make a quick buck for completing quick, part-time tasks. (CBC)

James Thrasher,a trained carpenterand an alcoholic, sayshe likes to work and stay busy.

Thrasher says local governments should create a program to give homeless people an opportunity to earn money.

"In Edmonton, they call it part-time work. You sign in, or they take the first 10people and they go to work for the day," he said.

"They could do that here too. It would be great if we could do that every day."

Wayne Goose says there's tension between Dene and Inuit homeless people in Yellowknife and says a homeless shelter specifically for Inuit people is needed. (CBC)

Wayne Goose, originallyfrom Kugluktuk, Nunavut,says a run-in with the law brought him to Yellowknife. He wants to go home, but says he has epilepsyand is afraid to live in a remote community without a hospital.

Goose says there are dozens of homeless Inuit men in Yellowknife, and that he's regularlytold to "go home"by the local homeless people.

Goose would like a homeless shelter created specifically for Inuit in Yellowknife.

"It's Dene-dominated," he said of the current scene."There is this ethnic conflict. You could almost make the analogy between Jews and Palestinians.

"If they could build an Inuit shelter for men or an Inuit shelter for women, that would promote or reawaken the identity that is being lost from suffering from alcoholism. I feel that would really help."